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Glittering dreams: India’s big push for solar power

Developing the Khavda plant is key to India’s solar power strategy

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This photograph shows solar panels installed at the Adani Green Renewable Energy Plant in Khavda. File photo: AFP

Vast lines of solar panels reflect the blazing sun in India’s western deserts, a dazzling ocean broken only by bristling wind turbines.

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India, along its desolate border with Pakistan, is building what it boasts will be the world’s largest renewable power plant, an emblem of a determined push to boost solar energy.

The Khavda plant in Gujarat state consists of some 60 million solar panels and 770 wind turbines spread over 538 square kilometres (208 square miles) – almost the size of the sprawling megacity Mumbai.

In front of a wall of screens, a handful of operators monitor the machines under the slogan: “Adani Group: Growth with Goodness”.

“Today, we can produce up to 11 gigawatts of electricity,” said Maninder Singh Pental, vice-president of Adani Green Energy, the subsidiary of Indian conglomerate Adani Group, and in which France’s TotalEnergies holds a 20 per cent stake.

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“In 2029, we will be able to produce up to 30GW,” he added proudly.

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