The Green Catalyst: Transforming Resources Governance Through Clean Energy

Authors

  • Pankaj Patil
  • Pruthviraj Chauhan
  • Harsh Dwivedi
  • Dhruv Singhvi
  • Sanskar Girase
  • Rudra Pasi

Abstract

This paper represents the role of energy resources, including traditional sources such as coal and oil, to natural and pollution-free sources like solar, wind and hydro energy. Indian energy plans show the progress in this field, and soon it will be able to stand on its own energy resources. India uses a lot of coal-based energy, ranking second in the world with around 30 GW of coal power plants under construction. India has an impressive amount of potential in Renewable Energy. Many groups of companies are investing in energy power plant Sources and putting efforts into projects to increase growth in Green Energy. And the country of youth needs to achieve 50% fossil fuel power by 2030. Is that enough to lower the pollution levels? The present study deals with the future prospects of renewable energy in India. There is vast potential for green energy in India. The Indian government's Ministry of New and Renewable Energy Sources (MNRE) is trying to initiate some effective schemes to make green energy a reality in India. Pollution has become one of the burning issues in both developing and developed countries. The research paper focuses on how industrial organizations can reduce environmental pollution through the utilization of green or renewable energy.

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Published

2026-04-17

How to Cite

Pankaj Patil, Pruthviraj Chauhan, Harsh Dwivedi, Dhruv Singhvi, Sanskar Girase, & Rudra Pasi. (2026). The Green Catalyst: Transforming Resources Governance Through Clean Energy. Journal of Alternative and Renewable Energy Sources, 12(1), 42–50. Retrieved from https://matjournals.net/engineering/index.php/JOARES/article/view/3461

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Articles