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When Did Gujarat Get Electricity?

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Last updated on 2 min read
Gujarat’s first villages were lit in 1902

That’s decades ahead of most of India—thanks to a hydroelectric plant on the Sasoi River that powered the princely state of Baroda.

Where does Gujarat rank on India’s energy map?

It’s a powerhouse in the northwest

Stretching along the Arabian Sea from the salt deserts of Kutch to the industrial corridors of Surat, Gujarat sits in India’s northwestern corner. As of 2026, its 72 million residents have access to 48 GW of installed capacity—that’s roughly 11% of India’s total—and a jaw-dropping electrification rate of 99.9%, one of the highest in the country, according to the Central Electricity Authority of India.

What are the headline numbers for Gujarat’s power sector?

Here’s the quick snapshot for 2026
Metric Value (2026) Source
Installed capacity 48 GW CEA, 2025 annual report
Peak demand (2025-26) 24 GW GUVNL System Operation Report Q3 FY2025–26
Electrification rate 99.9 % Census of India 2024 projection
First village electrified 1902 (Baroda State) IEEE India, 2021
Number of distribution utilities 4 PGVCL site, 2026

How did Gujarat’s power story begin?

It started with a tiny hydroelectric plant in 1902

The Gaekwad ruler of Baroda commissioned a 50-kW hydroelectric station at the foot of the Sasoi River. Village after village got wired, earning Baroda the nickname “India’s first electrified state.” After independence, the network merged into the Gujarat Electricity Board (GEB) in 1960. Then in the 2000s, Gujarat went all-in on ultra-mega power projects. By 2021, it had launched the Khavda Renewable Energy Park—which, once fully built, will be the world’s largest renewable-energy complex at 30 GW.

Which agencies manage Gujarat’s power today?

Four key players keep the grid running
  • Generation: Gujarat State Electricity Corporation Ltd (GSECL) owns 26 GW of coal, gas, wind and solar assets.
  • Transmission: Gujarat Energy Transmission Corporation Ltd (GETCO) operates a 50,000 km-plus network at 400 kV, 765 kV and HVDC corridors.
  • Distribution: Four state-owned Discoms—UGVCL, PGVCL, MGVCL and DGVCL—serve nearly 19 million consumers.
  • Private players: Adani Power and Torrent Power supply an additional 12 GW under long-term power purchase agreements.

Can you visit Gujarat’s energy landmarks?

Absolutely—here’s your roadmap

To walk through Gujarat’s energy history, begin in Vadodara. The old GEB headquarters now houses the Gujarat Energy Museum (open Tue-Sun, 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; entry ₹20). From there, head 25 km east to Dabhoi, a village that’s been fully solar-powered since 2019. Then swing over to Kutch, where the 250 MW Mundra Ultra Mega Power Project dominates the Arabian coastline. All three spots are reachable by road; the closest airports are Ahmedabad (120 km from Dabhoi) and Bhuj (140 km from Mundra).

Edited and fact-checked by the MeridianFacts editorial team.
Marcus Weber

Marcus Weber is a European geography specialist and data journalist based in Berlin. He has an unhealthy obsession with census data, border disputes, and the exact elevation of every European capital. His articles include more tables than most people are comfortable with.