Udita Sharma
Udita Sharma
Investment Engagement Manager
Helped 500+ investors build
their investment thesis.
Sector Focus

India’s Energy Reality and Its Hidden Balance Sheet in Gold

January 23, 2026

Two facts can be true at once, and in India they are. India is still running on coal in any way that matters for growth. At the same time, India is sitting on one of the world’s largest pools of private gold, a household shock absorber that behaves like a parallel reserve system.

Most capital-allocation debates treat these as unrelated trivia. They’re not. Together they describe India’s real balance sheet: what powers the economy day to day, and what stabilises it when things break.

Where is coal in the mix

Start with the boring reality: electricity demand is rising fast, and a growing economy cannot run on intermittency, targets, or press releases. It runs on dependable power and grid stability. Coal still provides the bulk of India’s electricity generation, and India is one of the world’s largest coal producers. That’s why coal isn’t just a “sunset sector” story.

Even if coal’s share in the power mix declines over time, the absolute rupee spend tied to coal’s ecosystem can remain large for years because the system still needs firm capacity while the grid adapts, evacuation and logistics that keep the lights on, and retrofits and efficiency work that reduce emissions intensity without breaking supply.

India is also a swing factor, whether it wants to be or not

This is where the “India matters globally” framing is actually useful. India can still claim low emissions per capita, but in absolute terms it’s already a top emitter and is expected to drive a large share of incremental energy demand over the next decade. That makes India’s marginal power mix globally consequential. What India builds next, and how quickly it can integrate it, changes global emissions trajectories more than marginal lifestyle shifts in rich countries.

It makes India the fulcrum. It means two things. Global pressure will increasingly attach itself to India’s emissions intensity through trade, lender behavior, procurement standards, and border adjustments. Domestic execution constraints will dominate outcomes more than lofty targets will.

Gold is India’s hidden balance sheet

Now layer the second map: gold. India is structurally long gold in private hands. Household holdings are often estimated in the tens of thousands of tonnes, and the RBI has also increased its own gold reserves in recent years. Unlike coal, gold isn’t a growth input. It’s a resilience asset.

Gold functions as a household shock absorber, especially where formal credit is thin and gold is collateral of first resort; a currency and external-risk hedge through official reserves; and a slowly expanding product and plumbing layer through ETFs, bonds, lending, and eventually more sophisticated structures.

This matters because India’s largest “savings pool” is not sitting neatly inside mutual funds, pensions, or insurance balance sheets. A non-trivial slice sits inside lockers. That changes how stress propagates through the economy and how liquidity appears in crises.

Put them together and you get the actual capital problem

Coal is the growth constraint. Gold is the shock buffer. That combination forces a more honest set of questions.

1) Where does the marginal rupee go when the grid has to do two jobs?

India has to expand electricity supply quickly and bend emissions intensity over time. Those goals are not naturally aligned in the short run. That creates investable corridors that don’t fit clean “green” labels: grid reinforcement and transmission buildout, storage and flexible capacity that makes renewables usable at scale, efficiency retrofits and emissions-intensity reductions in legacy assets, and logistics and evacuation systems that keep firm power stable while the transition proceeds.

2) How does policy reprice the stack?

A key near-term hinge is the move toward carbon pricing and compliance mechanisms. India’s planned carbon market for selected industries in 2026, if it develops teeth over time, matters less as a headline and more as a slow-acting acid that changes economics at the margin.
Even imperfect carbon pricing tends to create second-order effects: measurement and reporting discipline, shadow pricing in capex decisions, contracting norms and lender requirements, and procurement preferences that penalise high-intensity suppliers.

3) Can gold be intermediated without worsening India’s savings problem?

Gold is a buffer, but it’s also a drag when it crowds out productive financial savings and worsens the current account via imports.
The long-run opportunity is not “gold demand growth.” It’s financialising and intermediating what already exists: gold-backed lending with better risk and transparency, collateralised working-capital structures, instruments that convert idle stock into usable liquidity without forcing cultural change, and better recycling and formal channels that reduce net import dependence.

Bottom line

India is energy-hungry, coal-dependent, and gold-rich. That is not a contradiction. It’s the actual structure of the economy. Coal is what keeps India growing while the transition remains constrained by reliability and affordability. Gold is the hidden balance sheet that absorbs shocks when the formal system is stressed. Policy is the slow-moving mechanism that will reprice both over time.

Q: Isn’t coal obviously a bad long-term bet?
A: Coal as a forever-growth bet is fragile. Coal-linked system assets that remain cash-generative across multiple transition paths can still be investable if you underwrite policy, technology, and trade risks properly.
Q: Why does household gold matter to investors who never touch gold products?
A: Because it affects savings behavior, collateral availability, and crisis liquidity. In India, that bleeds into credit cycles and consumption resilience.
Q: What’s the point of mentioning a carbon market if enforcement may be weak?
A: Because even imperfect pricing mechanisms often change reporting, contracting, lender expectations, and procurement behavior. The investment impact is frequently indirect and cumulative.
Q: What’s the practical takeaway for an AIF manager?
A: Stop treating India’s energy path as background and stop treating household gold as irrelevant. Underwrite both explicitly, and build portfolios that survive messy transition outcomes, not just ideal ones.
Udita Sharma
Udita Sharma
Investment Engagement Manager
Helped 500+ investors build
their investment thesis.

TERMS OF USE

Thank you for your interest in our Website at https://unlistedintel.com/. Your use of this Website, including the content, materials and information available on or through this Website (together, the “Materials”), is governed by these Terms of Use (these “Terms”). By using this Website, you acknowledge that you have read and agree to these Terms.

NO OFFER, SOLICITATION OR ADVICE

Our site is provided for informational purposes only. It does not constitute to constitute (i) an offer, or solicitation of an offer, to

purchase or sell any security, other assets, or service, (ii) investment, legal, business, or tax advice, or an offer to provide such advice or (iii) a basis for making any investment decision.

The Materials are provided for informational purposes and have been prepared by Oister Global for informational purposes to acquaint existing and prospective underlying funds, entrepreneurs, and other company founders with Oister Global's recent and historical investment activities.

Please note that any investments or portfolio companies referenced in the Materials are illustrative and do not reflect the performance of any Oister Global fund as a whole. There is no obligation for Oister Global to update or alter any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

PURPOSE LIMITATION AND ACCESS TO YOUR PERSONAL DATA:

We will only collect your personal data in a fair, lawful, and transparent manner. We will keep your personal data accurate and up to date. We will process your personal data in line with your legal rights. We use your name and contact details, such as email, postal address, and contact number to continue communications with you. We may also use your contact information to invite you to events we are hosting or to keep you updated with our news.

USE OF COOKIES OR SIMILAR DEVICES

We use cookies on our website. This helps us to provide you with a better experience when you browse our website and also allows us to make improvements to our site. You may be able to change the preferences on your browser or device to prevent or limit your device’s acceptance of cookies, but this may prevent you from taking advantage of some of our features.

MATERIAL

The material displayed on our site is provided “as is”, without any guarantees, conditions, or warranties as to its accuracy, completeness, or reliability. You should be aware that a significant portion of the Materials includes or consists of information that has been provided by third parties and has not been validated or verified by us. In connection with our investment activities, we often become subject to a variety of confidentiality obligations to funds, investors, portfolio companies, and other third parties. Any statements we make may be affected by those confidentiality obligations, with the result that we may be prohibited from making full disclosures.

MISCELLANEOUS

This Website is operated and controlled by Oister Global in India. We may change the content on our site at any time. If the need arises, we may suspend access to our site, or close it indefinitely. We are under no obligation to update any material on our site.

CONTACT INFORMATION

Any questions, concerns or complaints regarding these Terms should be sent to info@oisterglobal.com

Campaign btn