India's Women Lead Clean Energy Jobs Revolution
While climate change threatens 34 million Indian jobs by 2030, women are leading the solution. From e-auto drivers to biogas cooperatives, they're building India's clean energy future.
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Climate predictions say 34 million jobs in India could disappear by 2030, with women bearing the brunt of those losses. But across Gujarat and Ahmedabad, women aren't waiting for the worst to happen.
Meet the new face of India's energy transition: an e-auto driver navigating Ahmedabad's busy streets after training through DriverBen. She's part of a growing movement of women entering clean transportation, turning climate threat into career opportunity.
In rural Gujarat, another group of women runs an entire biogas and fertilizer cooperative with support from the National Dairy Development Board. They're converting waste into energy and income, proving that clean energy solutions can bloom in India's villages, not just its cities.
These aren't token gestures or feel-good projects. They're real jobs with real paychecks in sectors that will only grow stronger as India shifts away from fossil fuels.

The training programs focus on skills that last. Women learn not just to drive electric vehicles but to maintain them, understand the technology, and troubleshoot problems. The biogas cooperative members manage production, handle finances, and distribute products to their communities.
The Ripple Effect
When women gain stable employment in clean energy, entire families benefit. Children stay in school longer. Household savings grow. Communities see what's possible when opportunity meets determination.
The cooperative model is particularly powerful in rural areas where traditional jobs are scarce. Women who once had limited income options now run sustainable businesses that serve their neighbors while protecting the environment.
India's clean energy sector is projected to create millions of jobs in the coming decade. With women leading the charge in electric transportation and renewable energy production, those predicted job losses don't look so inevitable anymore.
These pioneers are writing a different story, one where India's energy future is cleaner, more inclusive, and built by the very people who were supposed to lose the most.
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Based on reporting by The Better India
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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