• 64 percent of industrial leaders in India have already invested in energy efficiency and a further 32 percent plan to within 12 months

  • Energy consumes 28 percent of operating costs in India, and 72 percent say rising costs threaten profitability – but barriers have shifted since 2022, from cost to data, skills and organizational silos

  • Key barriers to energy efficiency in India include 42 percent workforce resistance to new technology, 42 percent lack of specialist resources and 41 percent gap in digital skills

BENGALURU, India, March 17, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Energy efficiency has become a board-level margin and risk issue, but many industrial organizations in India are struggling to turn intent into sustained results, according to a new report from ABB.

Digital readiness towards energy efficiency in India reaches 80 percent, ahead of global peers
Digital readiness towards energy efficiency in India reaches 80 percent, ahead of global peers

Based on a survey of 2,700 senior decision–makers across 15 countries (including India) and 15 industries, the study, developed in partnership with Sapio Research, finds that nearly two-thirds (64%) of respondents in India have already invested in energy efficiency and a further 32 percent plan to within the next 12 months. Yet progress is increasingly constrained by execution gaps.

Energy absorbs over one quarter (28%) of operating costs on average in India, and more than seven in ten companies (72%) say rising energy costs continue to challenge profitability, despite calmer wholesale markets. The latter is significantly exceeding the profitability threat perception across the world, which is 59 percent. The issue is not lack of ambition or funding. For executives, the challenge has shifted from reacting to price spikes to managing persistent price volatility and structural exposure.

“In India, the conversation around energy efficiency has matured from only a cost-saving tactic to a critical pillar of long-term business strategy. The next wave of competitive advantage will be defined by those who can bridge the ‘execution’ gap, turning data into actionable insights and embedding energy efficiency into the operational DNA of their organization,” explained Amit Gupta, Local Division President, Motion Services in India, ABB. “It’s no longer just about adopting technology; it’s about building a culture of sustained, scalable execution to enhance profitability and resilience in a volatile market.”

Execution, not intent, is now the differentiator

The study shows that digital readiness in India has reached 80 percent, well above the average global figure (67%), with respondents already using or ready to deploy digital energy-management tools. However, readiness alone does not guarantee results. Only 41 percent of Indian companies consistently apply total cost of ownership (TCO) when making investment decisions – despite 80 percent agreeing it should guide purchasing.

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