PM-Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana
Background and Purpose
India’s energy demand is rising rapidly, and much of it is still met by fossil fuels. This creates two big challenges:
- High electricity bills for households, especially the middle class and rural poor.
- Dependence on coal and fossil fuels, which worsens pollution and increases carbon emissions.
👉 To address this, the government launched PM-Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana in 2024.
It is a Central Sector Scheme, meaning 100% funding support comes from the Centre.
Purpose in one line: To boost rooftop solar (RTS) capacity so households can produce their own electricity and get up to 300 units per month free of cost.
Timeline and Targets
- Tenure: 2024 – 2026-27
- Target:
- Install 30 GW solar capacity through residential rooftop systems.
- Achieve 1 crore rooftop solar installations.
- Generate 1,000 billion units of renewable power over 25 years.
- Prevent 720 million tonnes of CO₂ emissions over the lifetime of these projects.
Objectives
- Provide free/affordable electricity (up to 300 units/month) to households.
- Reduce dependence on non-renewable energy → promote clean energy transition.
- Strengthen local manufacturing, supply chains, and employment generation.
- Enhance energy security by reducing imports of fossil fuels.
- Promote awareness in rural areas by creating Model Solar Villages (one per district).
Salient Features
(A) Scheme Background
- Earlier, the Phase II Grid-Connected Rooftop Solar Programme (2019) targeted 40 GW rooftop solar by 2025-26.
- This scheme is now subsumed under PM-Surya Ghar to accelerate adoption.
(B) Eligibility for Central Financial Assistance (CFA)
- Applies to grid-connected RTS systems installed on roof, terrace, balcony, elevated structure, or Building Integrated PV (BiPV).
- Also extends to Group Net Metering and Virtual Net Metering (DISCOM-approved).
- Residential sector only – commercial/industrial consumers not eligible.
(C) Subsidy / CFA Structure
- Subsidy depends on capacity of solar system and household consumption.
- For individual households:
- ₹30,000 per kWp for the first 2 kWp capacity.
- ₹18,000 per kWp for the next 1 kWp.
- No CFA beyond 3 kWp.
- For Group Housing Societies / RWAs: Up to 500 kWp (max 3 kWp per house) with ₹18,000 per kWp CFA.
📌 Example:
- 1.5 kWp system → 30,000 × 1.5 = ₹45,000 subsidy.
- 2.5 kWp system → (30,000 × 2) + (18,000 × 0.5) = ₹69,000 subsidy.
(D) Supportive Measures
- Collateral-Free Loans: Up to 3 kWp at ~7% interest.
- Quality Assurance: Technical standards must be met for CFA eligibility.
- National Portal: Single window for applying, vendor selection, subsidy tracking, grievance redressal.
- State Subsidies: States/UTs may add their own support over and above CFA.
- Model Solar Villages: ₹1 crore grant per district for demonstration villages.
- DISCOM Incentives:
- DISCOMs get 5–10% incentive on benchmark cost for facilitating RTS adoption.
- Incentives apply to first 18,000 MW additional installations.
(E) Conditions for CFA
- Solar modules must meet Domestic Content Requirement (DCR).
- CFA available even if inverter size varies.
- If a household already availed subsidy earlier, it can get CFA again for the balance capacity up to 3 kWp.
Wider Significance
- Reduces electricity bills → savings for households.
- Promotes energy self-reliance and climate change mitigation.
- Encourages local manufacturing of solar panels, creating jobs.
- Empowers local bodies with incentives for promotion.
- Acts as a grassroots awareness movement, especially in rural India through model villages.
✅ In summary: PM-Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana is a game-changer scheme that not only provides free electricity but also pushes India towards clean energy, reduces import dependence, and promotes employment. It is a classic example of a scheme that blends social welfare + environmental protection + economic growth.