I write this as someone who has watched the rise of solar with both exhilaration and unease. The headline is stark: in Q1 2026, roughly 300 GWh of clean solar generation went unused — curtailed or otherwise wasted — because it could not be absorbed by the grid or market. That is 300,000 MWh of zero-marginal-cost electricity that never reached a socket. To put it in human terms, at an average household consumption of ~300 kWh/month, this is roughly equivalent to supplying one million households with a month of electricity. That lost opportunity deserves a clear accounting: what happened, why it happened, what it means, and what we must do next.
What happened — figures and timeline
- Time window: Q1 2026 (January–March). The system operator reported cumulative curtailment of about 300 GWh of solar during this quarter, concentrated around several high-solar, low-demand days and during limited system-transfer windows.
- Pattern: large midday spikes in solar output — particularly on clear, low-demand weekends — coincided with transmission bottlenecks and limited short-term market options. Curtailment events clustered in late January and mid-February when new utility-scale projects came online in the same export corridors.
I have been tracking the same structural issues for years — especially transmission and access constraints that blunt the value of utility-scale solar Solar Power : GigaWatt or GigaFlop ? — and the events of Q1 2026 are an ugly confirmation of those risks.
Root causes
Multiple failures combined to turn abundant sunshine into wasted electrons:
Grid constraints: limited transmission capacity and congested corridors prevented export of midday solar to distant load centers. This is the recurring culprit I flagged earlier — inadequate transfer capability and planning mismatch between generation build-out and network upgrades Transmission Capacity is the Culprit !.
Market rules and settlement design: inflexible day-ahead markets, punitive imbalance charges, and slow intraday trading meant operators defaulted to curtailment instead of redispatching or using price signals to shift demand.
Storage shortage: insufficient utility-scale batteries and limited behind-the-meter storage meant there was nowhere to park excess midday generation for later consumption.
Forecasting and operational coordination errors: inaccurate short-term solar forecasts and weak coordination between regional system operators increased uncertainty and raised the perceived risk of overgeneration.
Impacts — immediate and ripple effects
Emissions: every MWh of curtailed solar that the system replaced by burning coal or keeping coal online implies additional CO2 emissions compared with the zero-carbon alternative. Using a conservative coal-intensity range (~0.8–1.0 tCO2/MWh), the 300 GWh lost represents roughly 240,000–300,000 tonnes of CO2 of foregone abatement in that quarter alone.
Economics: curtailment destroys developer revenue and raises the levelized cost of new projects. With no reliable offtake, investment risk increases and financing costs rise.
Solar developers: developers face lost energy sales and strained PPA relationships; some will have to renegotiate contracts or accept compensation shortfalls.
Coal plants: paradoxically, coal units receive mixed impacts. Some benefit from reduced ramping and capacity payments, while others incur inefficient cycling costs and poorer plant economics as they are forced into stop-start operation.
Policy and technical fixes (what actually works)
We can — and should — move quickly on several fronts. These are practical, not merely aspirational.
Market design changes
Create faster intraday markets and shorter settlement windows so excess solar can be traded or priced down, avoiding blunt curtailment.
Reform imbalance and settlement rules so generators are not perverse-incentivized to shut down renewables when grid stress appears.
Introduce locational pricing or congestion signals so market participants see the true value of moving energy and investing in constrained corridors.
Accelerate storage deployment
Target rapid procurement of utility-scale batteries where curtailment is frequent.
Incentivize behind-the-meter storage aggregation to create virtual power plants that absorb midday surges.
Better forecasting and operational tools
Invest in high-resolution solar forecasting (satellite + machine learning) and integrate forecasts into dispatch decisions.
Improve coordination among regional grid operators to smooth transfers and share flexibility.
Grid upgrades and flexible resources
Prioritize transmission investments that unlock congested export paths.
Encourage flexible generation (fast-ramping gas, demand response) and revise coal plant operating rules to allow rapid, economical ramping rather than inflexible baseload mindset.
Conclusion — an actionable takeaway
Q1 2026’s 300 GWh of curtailed solar is not an isolated accounting footnote — it is a symptom of a system that still treats renewable growth as an afterthought. Policymakers must treat curtailment as a metric of governance failure: mandate predictable compensation for curtailed generation, accelerate procurement of storage where curtailment is highest, and reform market and transmission planning so generation and networks grow together.
For industry: prioritize projects that incorporate co-located storage or flexible offtake, and push system operators to adopt faster markets and forecasting tools. For policymakers: align grid investment timelines with generation approvals and make “no-regrets” storage procurements where curtailment is chronic.
If we act on these steps — market reform, storage scale-up, better forecasts, and targeted grid upgrades — we can turn wasted sunshine into secure, low-cost energy that displaces coal rather than gets lost to it.
Regards,
Hemen Parekh
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