

In a first, Adani Green turns to external contractors to meet expansion push
renewable energy capacity annually over the next four years to reach its goal of 50 GW by March 2030—nearly double the 3.4 GW it added on average over the past four years.Until now, the company handled most EPC work in-house or through Adani Infra (India) Ltd, a privately held entity of the Adani group. In FY25, Adani Infra was tasked with managing infrastructure projects across the group’s listed companies to retain margins that would otherwise go to external vendors.Sterling and Wilson, Bondada, and KPI confirmed their business with Adani Green Energy through press notes between November and January.“We are pleased to partner with Adani Green Energy for the Khavda renewable energy complex, one of the world’s largest clean energy developments.
Securing the EPC mandate for 475 MW is a strong endorsement of Amara Raja’s engineering and execution capabilities," said Nageshwar SV, business head, Amara Raja Infra.L&T did not respond to Mint's queries on the subject.In an investor call on 23 January, Ashish Khanna, chief executive officer of Adani Green Energy, had said the company was working with third parties to augment its capabilities. “We are the best and we continue to remain the best (at EPC).
But we realize that for the scale at which we are going to go for, we do need other EPC—other contractors too at a scale which can work with us.”“We have a road map of 30 gigawatt in the next 4 years, per se. And I think it is important that we take advantage of all the best resources which are available in this country to build these projects,” Khanna had then said.When contacted, an Adani Group spokesperson said the company was on track to achieve annual and long-term goals.
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