At the time of announcing his ambitious targets, Modi had miscalculated India’s rising demand for energy and solar energy’s inability to meet peak demand in the absence of storage capacity. Humbled by his experience, Modi has revised his targets with a touch of reality. Now, instead of keeping a short-term target for reducing oil imports, he has set the target of achieving energy independence by 2047 and chose the last Independence Day to announce it: “India today is not energy independent. Energy imports in the country account for an average Rs 12,000 crore a year. Energy independence is vital for India’s development. Hence, today, India must resolve to become energy independent by 2047, and our roadmap is very clear on this.” Meeting the new target depends upon a number of factors, including electrification of the Indian Railways, increasing blending of ethanol in petroleum products and a breakthrough in green hydrogen production capacity with the help of a domestic industry, which must focus on innovation and indigenous electrolyser manufacturing.