In a candid interaction at The Economist’s Resilient Futures Summit in New Delhi, Adani Green Energy Executive Director Sagar Adani revealed how the company’s relentless growth trajectory is laser-focused on achieving 50 GW renewable energy capacity by 2030.
The crown jewel of their projects? The colossal Khawda park in Gujarat’s Kutch region, set to become the globe’s biggest single-site renewable hub at 30 GW. Spanning an area larger than many cities—precisely 538 sq km, dwarfing Paris metro by fivefold—this park exemplifies scale and innovation.
From a current base of 20 GW installed capacity, Adani Green is adding power year after year, each step calibrated for that transformative 2030 target. Backing this is Gautam Adani’s landmark $100 billion vow for India’s energy shift, a pledge that stands tall among worldwide corporate initiatives.
Beyond renewables, investments flow into transmission infrastructure, thermal assets, and diverse energy streams nationwide. Sagar lauded government policies as the catalyst behind India’s record-breaking 55 GW renewable additions in the past year.
On geopolitical fronts like the Hormuz issue, he commended New Delhi’s steady stewardship. ‘The government has shielded citizens from fallout and will keep acting decisively,’ Adani noted.
As India accelerates toward net-zero ambitions, Adani Green’s blueprint offers a roadmap of resilience, blending ambition with actionable execution.