
Why green entrepreneurship is where India’s next jobs will come from Premium
The Hindu
Why green entrepreneurship is where India’s next jobs will come from
Green careers are still too often imagined as narrow and technical: solar engineers, wind technicians, or electric vehicle designers. That picture is outdated. India’s green transition is an economy-wide shift that is quietly redrawing what success looks like for students entering the workforce.
According to a recent study, India’s green economy could create 48 million full-time equivalent jobs by 2047 and attract $4.1 trillion in investments, as the country builds new value chains in clean energy, circular manufacturing, bio-based materials and nature-based solutions. This scale of transformation carries a simple implication for students.
The most resilient careers will sit at the intersection of climate literacy and entrepreneurship. The opportunity is vast but it also comes with a shift in mindset. Green jobs will not emerge fast enough if young Indians only queue for roles in established firms. Many of the jobs of the future will be created by those willing to build solutions from scratch.
This is already visible. For example, Vidyut Mohan’s idea to convert crop residue into biofuels and helps reduce stubble burning, incubated during his time at IIT-Delhi, grew into Takachar, which won the Earthshot Prize. At the other end of the spectrum, commerce graduate Vaishali Nigam Sinha co-founded ReNew, now among India’s largest renewable energy companies.
Their stories differ in scale and sector, but have a lesson often missing from career counselling sessions: sustainability is a lens through which every discipline can create value. Classroom curiosity combined with mentorship, incubation, and real-world testing can lead to the genesis of green ventures.
While green entrepreneurship welcomes diverse skill sets and mindsets, the most important thing it offers students is the freedom to innovate with purpose. A biotechnology graduate could develop a new compostable polymer for packaging, a law student may help frame a regulation for Extended Producer Responsibility to create demand for recycled products, while an architecture student could reinvent the use of engineered bamboo for flooring. For instance, design student Sahar Mansoor launched Bare Necessities, a start-up to promote a zero-waste lifestyle by using natural materials and innovative and sustainable packaging. The green economy rewards interdisciplinary thinking because climate problems do not fall under rigid disciplinary boundaries.













