We harness India’s abundant natural resources – sun, wind, water and biomass, to generate the power that lights up homes and empowers communities. Our projects blend cutting-edge renewables (like solar PV and wind farms) with efficient conventional plants, ensuring reliable 24/7 supply and a stable grid. This balance is yielding real results: as of Oct 2024, renewable sources supplied roughly 203 GW (46.3%) of India’s 452.7 GW capacity, a share that grows every day. Globally, clean energy is surging too – in 2024 alone renewables added 585 GW of capacity (over 90% of all new power). Each megawatt we produce fuels hope for a healthier planet and stronger society, while inspiring international progress.

 

  • Diverse mix: We deploy solar PV projects (ground-mounted and rooftops), onshore wind farms, hydroelectric plants, and bioenergy (like biomass and waste-to-power). For example, India’s solar and wind pipelines now exceed 105 GW and 50 GW By combining these with run-of-river hydro and biogas, our output is clean and resilient.
  • Record growth: India is adding renewables rapidly (about 24.2 GW in one year). We mirror this momentum: in 2023 India installed 9.7 GW of new solar (5th highest globally), and today an Omkareshwar floating solar park alone generates 216 MW (powering ~140,000 homes). These projects showcase how innovation and community benefit go hand in hand (floating solar, for instance, cuts land use and evaporation by over 50% while preserving rivers).
  • Reliable baseload: We maintain necessary conventional generation (gas, hydro, clean coal) as well, bridging the gap when renewables fluctuate. Our older plants are retrofitted for efficiency and lower This dual approach reduces outages and keeps prices stable – all while steadily shifting the energy mix toward green sources.
  • Community impact: Renewable energy is creating opportunity across India. The sector employed about 1.02 million people in 2023. By building plants, we train local workers and create lasting jobs. Every project includes community outreach – from hiring villagers to supplying schools and health clinics with power – turning infrastructure into