Abstract Rural livelihoods in India suffer from unreliable energy, limited access to productive technologies, and weak market connections. Decentralized solar energy (DRE) provides a way to overcome these challenges by offering reliable, clean power close to demand centres and enabling productive uses of energy (PUE). This paper explores whether and how solar energy can enhance rural livelihoods. It does so by combining global and Indian evidence along with a focused case study on Green India Initiative Pvt. Ltd. (GII) and its founder-director, Dr. Sachin Yashwant Shigwan, known as the Solar Man of India. The paper employs a mixed-methods approach that includes literature synthesis, program mapping, and outcomes reported by practitioners. It uses a framework based on livelihoods capitals (human, social, physical, natural, financial) to analyse the impacts. The findings show that solar energy significantly improves livelihoods when systems are designed for productivity and integrated into markets, finance, and maintenance networks. The GII case highlights scalable features such as appliance bundling, women’s enterprise models, anchor-load strategies, and remote monitoring. These features convert watts into steady income, job growth, and resilience. The paper concludes with recommendations on policy, finance, and operations to expand productive DRE across rural India while managing environmental and social risks. Keywords: decentralised renewable energy, rural livelihoods, productive use of energy, mini-grids, Green India Initiative, Dr. Sachin Yashwant Shigwan, India
Vaidya et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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