India is expected to reach 160 GW module and 120 GW cell manufacturing capacity by 2030, enough to supply both itself and whatever shortfall the US is experiencing, up from 80 GW and 15 GW of production capacity today. That’s according to a report from SolarPower Europe whose Indian projections were provided by the National Solar Energy Federation of India (NSEFI). The report predicts that the wafer-polysilicon segments will grow, in tandem, to 25 GW in 2026, 40 GW in 2027, 60 GW in 2028, 75 GW in 2029 and 100 GW in 2030. This is far beyond what we consider credible – maybe polysilicon can grow that quickly, but the wafer segment is more difficult to develop – search…