The Indian energy derivatives & hedging market is projected to register a strong CAGR during the forecast period (2026-2031).
The Energy Derivatives and Hedging Market for Indian Wholesale Energy is governed by the regulations of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). Energy derivatives are traded through various exchanges, including the Multi-Commodity Exchange of India (MCX) and the National Stock Exchange of India (NSE). On January 12, 2025, SEBI approved the introduction of Electricity Derivatives, which will enable Energy Market participants to hedge their exposure to Volatility in the prices of electricity, thereby creating more predictable long-term price levels for electricity users. In addition, the Central Electricity Authority of India reports that the total generation of electricity in India exceeds 1,600 billion units annually, thereby providing significant exposure to Volatility, thus creating a tremendous demand for Market participants to hedge their fuel-related cost, the cost of procuring electricity, supply chain-related risk throughout various Industry and Utility sectors.
India’s electricity demand continues to rise rapidly, with total generation surpassing 1,600 billion units annually, according to Central Electricity Authority. Increasing demand-supply imbalances and seasonal fluctuations in fuel costs, especially coal and gas, create price volatility. This environment drives the adoption of derivatives instruments such as electricity futures, enabling distribution companies, generators, and industrial users to hedge procurement costs and stabilise financial performance.
The introduction of electricity derivatives by the Securities and Exchange Board of India in 2025 marks a major structural shift in India’s energy markets. Regulatory alignment between SEBI and power sector authorities enables transparent price discovery and standardised contracts. This policy support encourages participation from institutional players and utilities, improving liquidity and strengthening the overall hedging ecosystem in India’s evolving energy derivatives market.
Despite regulatory progress, India’s energy derivatives market remains relatively underdeveloped, with limited trading volumes compared to global benchmarks. According to Central Electricity Authority, physical electricity markets dominate transactions, while derivatives adoption is still in early stages. Low participation from industrial users and limited awareness of hedging tools restrict liquidity, making price discovery less efficient and slowing the overall growth of the derivatives ecosystem.
India’s renewable energy capacity is rapidly increasing, exceeding 180 GW as per Ministry of New and Renewable Energy. This transition introduces variability in power generation, creating demand for advanced hedging instruments. Electricity derivatives and structured contracts can help manage intermittency risks and price fluctuations, offering significant growth opportunities for exchanges and financial participants as India integrates more renewable energy into its grid.
India’s energy trade and hedging supply chain is highly import-dependent, with crude oil and LNG sourced mainly from the Middle East feeding into domestic refining, power generation, and industrial consumption, where price exposure is managed through futures and options on exchanges like MCX and NSE under SEBI regulation. In 2025–2026, disruptions linked to the Iran–US conflict and Strait of Hormuz tensions have tightened global supply, increased shipping costs, and pushed oil price volatility higher, directly amplifying hedging demand in India. This has strengthened reliance on derivatives for cost stability while exposing the system to higher margin requirements and liquidity stress during volatility spikes.
Regulations | Impact on Market |
Securities and Exchange Board of India (Electricity Derivatives Approval, 2025) | Enables electricity futures trading, improving price discovery, strengthening hedging mechanisms, and enhancing transparency in India’s power markets. |
July 2026: MCX launched India’s first electricity futures contracts, following approval from the Securities and Exchange Board of India. This rollout introduced standardised, cash-settled monthly contracts, enabling power generators, DISCOMs, and industrial users to hedge electricity price volatility and manage demand-supply risks more effectively
July 2026: NSE commenced electricity futures trading after regulatory approval, becoming the second exchange in India to launch such contracts. This development allows market participants to secure future power prices, supporting utilities in improving financial stability and enhancing price discovery in India’s power sector.
In India, the restructuring of energy derivatives by instrument type shows that electricity futures are the dominant type of energy futures traded on regulated exchanges following the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (SEBI) approval of electricity derivatives in 2025. In addition to electricity futures, futures contracts on crude oil and natural gas are being developed for trading on regulated exchanges, so options are limited; however, they are emerging. The use of swaps in the energy derivatives segment is limited because there are no/limited over-the-counter (OTC) markets to support the trade of swaps; hence, the structure of India’s energy derivatives market is more exchange-based than customized, which is the structure found in other global markets.
India’s energy derivatives market is primarily being driven via applications of price risk management, particularly in the power sector where SEBI issued its electricity derivatives framework in 2025; this allows generators, distribution companies and large industrial end-users to lock in their future electricity prices to decrease their overall exposure to future electricity price volatility caused by fluctuations in fuel prices and/or fluctuations in electricity demand. The selcted framework supports hedging as opposed to speculation, thus aiding in the function of derivatives markets for stabilizing the overall costs of procurement of electricity and enhancing the overall process of price discovery.
The end-user segment of India’s energy derivatives market consists of generators, distribution companies (DISCOMs) and large industrial users, who are the primary participants under SEBI’s electricity derivatives framework. The end-users utilize the energy derivatives market as a price risk hedging instrument for electricity price fluctuations and to ensure there is a secure supply of electricity in the future. Additionally
Multi Commodity Exchange of India
National Stock Exchange of India
Indian Energy Exchange
Power Exchange India Limited
Hindustan Power Exchange
Indian Gas Exchange
NCDEX (National Commodity & Derivatives Exchange)
PTC India
The Multi-Commodity Exchange of India (MCX) is the largest exchange in India for commodity derivatives. MCX provides a trading platform for trading contracts that have an underlying commodity exposure (crude oil, natural gas, electricity, etc.).
NSE is the primary financial market infrastructure provider in India. The NSE also recently announced its plans to introduce natural gas derivatives in collaboration with the Indian Gas Exchange in 2026. These new derivatives will be based on the Indian domestic GIXI price index and provide localized hedging and price-discovery mechanisms in the Indian gas market. This introduction of Indian-based pricing and hedging structures is a notable departure from traditional global commodity pricing structures, and it will provide Indian gas market participants - producers, distributors, and industrial users - with increased risk management capabilities.
IEX is India's first technology-driven power market trading platform for the price discovery and physical delivery of electricity throughout India. Today, approximately 8,100 market participants, including DISCOM's, generators and industrial users from 28 Indian states, participate in IEX's physical market on an average daily basis. IEX's physical market pricing is the benchmark for pricing all electricity derivatives introduced in 2025 and will continue to serve as the basis for all physical spot prices as other financial products evolve in India's electricity derivatives market going forward.
India’s energy derivatives and hedging market is expanding under SEBI-led reforms, with electricity futures launched in 2025 strengthening price discovery, improving risk management for utilities, and increasing market participation across power, gas, and industrial segments.
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
2. MARKET SNAPSHOT
2.1. Market Overview
2.2. Market Definition
2.3. Scope of the Study
2.4. Geopolitical Flashpoints
2.4.1. U.S.-Iran Impact On Supply Hotspots And Trade
2.4.2. Energy Trade Realignment
2.4.3. Currency And Macro Risk
3. BUSINESS LANDSCAPE
3.1. Energy Policy and Regulatory Shifts
3.2. Pricing Volatility
3.3. ESG Trade Analysis
3.4. Liquidity Shifts
4. SUPPLY CHAIN ANALYSIS
5. GERMANY ENERGY DERIVATIVES & HEDGING MARKET BY INSTRUMENT TYPE
5.1. Introduction
5.2 Futures Contracts
5.3 Options Contracts
5.4 Forwards Contracts
5.5 Swaps
5.6 Structured Derivatives
6. GERMANY ENERGY DERIVATIVES & HEDGING MARKET BY END USER
6.1. Introduction
6.2. Energy Producers
6.3. Industrial Consumers
6.4. Utilities
6.5. Financial Institutions
6.6. Trading Firms
7. GERMANY ENERGY DERIVATIVES & HEDGING MARKET BY APPLICATION
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Price Risk Hedging
7.3 Fuel Cost Stabilisation
7.4 Revenue Protection
7.5 Portfolio Risk Management
8. GERMANY ENERGY DERIVATIVES & HEDGING MARKET BY CITIES
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Frankfurt
8.3 Leipzig
8.4 Berlin
8.5 Hamburg
8.6 Munich
8.7 Düsseldorf
9. COMPANY PROFILES
9.1 Intercontinental Exchange
9.2 BP
9.3 Shell
9.4 EDF Trading
9.5 Centrica Energy
9.6 Vitol
9.7 Trafigura
9.8 Mercuria Energy Trading
9.9 Glencore
9.10 Uniper
9.11 SEFE Marketing & Trading
9.12 Macquarie Group
10. APPENDIX
10.1. Currency
10.2. Assumptions
10.3. Base and Forecast Years Timeline
10.4. Key benefits for the stakeholders
10.5. Research Methodology
10.6. Abbreviations
LIST OF FIGURES
LIST OF TABLES
Methodology information coming soon.
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The India Energy Derivatives & Hedging Market is projected to register a strong Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) during the forecast period of 2026-2031. This robust growth is primarily driven by India's rapidly increasing electricity demand, significant price volatility in energy commodities, and strong regulatory support.
SEBI's approval of Electricity Derivatives on January 12, 2025, marks a major structural shift, enabling energy market participants to hedge exposure to electricity price volatility. This regulatory alignment with power sector authorities aims to ensure transparent price discovery, standardized contracts, and encourage participation from institutional players, thereby strengthening the overall hedging ecosystem.
The demand for energy hedging instruments in India is primarily driven by the nation's rapidly rising electricity consumption, which exceeds 1,600 billion units annually. This creates significant exposure to price volatility due to demand-supply imbalances and seasonal fluctuations in fuel costs like coal and gas, prompting participants to mitigate procurement and supply chain risks.
The market is seeing increased demand for electricity derivatives, approved in 2025, to hedge against price volatility for various energy users. Key participants include distribution companies, power generators, and industrial consumers who aim to stabilize financial performance by hedging fuel-related costs and electricity procurement costs.
Energy derivatives in India are traded through prominent exchanges such as the Multi-Commodity Exchange of India (MCX) and the National Stock Exchange of India (NSE). These exchanges are actively developing energy contracts for various energy-based commodities to provide enhanced liquidity and ensure accurate price discovery mechanisms.
Compared to various global counterparts, India's Energy Derivatives and Hedging Market is still considered to be in its infancy. However, it possesses significant growth potential due to the rapid increase in India’s energy consumption and the robust regulatory support provided by SEBI, positioning it for substantial expansion during the forecast period.











