India has unveiled an ambitious ₹6.4 trillion ($77 billion) plan to harness more than 76 gigawatts (GW) of hydroelectric power from the Brahmaputra River basin by 2047, amid growing concerns over China’s dam-building upstream. The announcement, made by the Central Electricity Authority (CEA) on October 13, 2025, comes at a critical moment as India seeks to meet rising electricity demands while reducing fossil fuel dependence.
The Transmission Plan: Key Features
The plan aims to build the transmission infrastructure required to carry hydroelectric power from 208 large hydro projects across 12 sub-basins in India’s northeastern region, notably,
- Arunachal Pradesh
- Assam
- Sikkim
- Mizoram
- Manipur
- Meghalaya
- Nagaland
- West Bengal
Together, these regions house over 80% of India’s untapped hydro potential, with Arunachal Pradesh alone contributing 52.2 GW of the total estimated capacity.
In addition to conventional hydro, the plan includes 11.1 GW of pumped-storage capacity, which can balance grid fluctuations and support renewable integration.
Investment and Phases
The plan is structured in two major phases,
- Phase 1 (until 2035): ₹1.91 trillion (~$23 billion)
- Phase 2 (2035–2047): ₹4.52 trillion (~$54 billion)
These phases will be executed with contributions from key public sector utilities, including,
- NHPC (National Hydroelectric Power Corporation)
- NEEPCO (North Eastern Electric Power Corporation)
- SJVN (Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam)
Some projects are already under development, providing early momentum to the massive transmission rollout.
Geopolitical Context: China’s Upstream Dam
- The Brahmaputra River, known as the Yarlung Zangbo in Tibet, originates in China before entering India and flowing into Bangladesh.
- This transboundary river has become a geopolitical flashpoint due to China’s construction of a large hydroelectric dam on the upper stretch of the river.
- Indian experts fear that Chinese upstream activity could reduce dry-season flows by up to 85% in downstream Indian territories, particularly affecting Arunachal Pradesh and Assam.
- This adds urgency and strategic relevance to India’s hydro expansion in the eastern Himalayan region.
Static Facts
- Plan Announced By: Central Electricity Authority (CEA)
- Date: October 13, 2025
- Total Investment: ₹6.4 trillion (~$77 billion)
- Total Capacity Target: 76 GW hydroelectric + 11.1 GW pumped storage
- Project Sites: 208 hydro projects in 12 sub-basins
- States Involved: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Sikkim, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Manipur, Nagaland, West Bengal
- Phase 1 Cost: ₹1.91 trillion (till 2035)
- Phase 2 Cost: ₹4.52 trillion (2035–2047)
- Key PSUs: NHPC, NEEPCO, SJVN


UIDAI Records 231 crore Aadhaar Authenti...
Bharat Taxi Begins Trials in Delhi and G...
Lok Sabha Passes Central Excise (Amendme...

