Reliance Industries started production in the first phase of the planned 10 GW solar module facility. The fully automated line produces heterojunction (HJT) panels with outputs up to 720 W.
Reliance Industries started production on its first Gigawatt scale solar module line. The fully automated line produces HJT panels with a maximum of 720 W output. The company said that the panels are already certified by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS).
The facility is designed for a capacity of 10 GW per year, with a modular arrangement that makes it possible to quickly deport up to 20 GW. It will be fully vertically integrated, whereby production is spans from polysilicon to panel, including Ingot, wafer, cell, panel, glass and polyolefine -elastomer (POE).
“In general in each [stage] The engineering is completed on the entire solar chain, the long lead items and the tenders are completed and construction is in full swing, ”said Reliance Industries during a recent analyst meeting.
Due to vertical integration, large -scale production and advanced production technology, the modules produced in this factory will be more cost -effective and attractive than imported alternatives, according to the company.
Reliance Industries also develops 30 GW in the production capacity of the battery, with production cells, packages and battery storage systems. It said that solar panels are being transported in his Jamnagar factory to Kutch, where the country has protected for the development of solar project. Work on the Zonneboerderij, including a special transmission line from Jamnagar, has already begun, with international and local contractors preparing the country.
In addition, Reliance Industries are building a green hydrogen ecosystem of 2,000 hectares in Kandla, India, where the electrolyzers will produce in collaboration with Nel ASA from Norway. Green hydrogen production will be powered by its own generation of solar energy and storage of battery energy.
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