NEW DELHI: India's annual capacity addition of wind power will more than double to 7.1 GW on average in the next two fiscals, compared with 3.4 GW in FY24 and FY25, driven by government measures to ramp up the pace, Crisil Ratings said on Monday.The addition will take the installed wind capacity up to 63 GW by FY27. The capacity additions over FY23 to FY25 continued to remain tepid in the range of 6-7 GW on account of fewer successful auctions of wind capacities, it said.These were largely due to lower interest from developers on account of low tariffs that dampened returns for developers along with issues in terms of availability of land and transmission infrastructure at sites with high wind potential. However, tailwinds are emerging which will help double the pace of capacity additions over the next two fiscals, the agency said.Government's push towards the auctions of hybrid renewable projects - a combination of solar, wind and storage - as well as an emerging favourable cost regime for wind projects are expected to drive capacity additions, it said.In addition to the steady auction pace of standalone wind projects, auctions of hybrid renewable energy have spurted.Around 30-50% of the capacities of such hybrid projects are expected to be wind power as these generate electricity during peak load times, unlike solar power, which generates mostly during daytime.Further, as these hybrid projects help distribution companies solve the problem of scheduling power at critical times, we expect these projects to find favour in offtake and grow fast, it said.