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ReNew Power: ReNew Power commissions Gujarat’s first wind-solar hybrid project

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: ReNew Power (“ReNew”) (NASDAQ: RNW, RNWWW), India’s
leading renewable energy company, today announced that it had set up Gujarat’s first wind-solar hybrid
project at the Chlor-Alkali unit of Grasim Industries Limited in Vilayat, Bharuch, in southern Gujarat.
The first phase of the hybrid project, with 17.6 MW commercial-scale wind-solar, commenced operations
last week and is expected to generate ~80 million units of renewable energy every year, mitigating ~75,000
tCO2e (carbon emissions) annually.
The partnership will expand further with an additional 16.68 MW, which will be commissioned in the next
financial year (FY23), as part of the second phase. The project is being developed by ReNew Green Solutions
(RGS), the B2B arm of ReNew Power. Both the parties have entered into a 25-year PPA, which will see the
project supply power for the plant at Vilayat, Bharuch, via an Open Access mechanism.
Once both phases are commissioned with a combined capacity of 34.28 MW, the partnership is expected to
generate a total of approximately 160 million units of renewable electricity annually, mitigating a cumulative
~150,000 tCO2e (carbon emission) a year (source: tCO2e value calculated as per CEA database version 16).
Both phases together have a total investment of INR ~3.82 billion (~$51 million) through an equity
partnership.
Speaking on the project, Mr. Mayank Bansal, Chief Commercial Officer, ReNew Power,said: “As India strives
to achieve net zero by 2070, largescale adoption of renewables by corporate India is key.
With corporates increasingly harnessing renewable energy, ReNew aims to develop around 250 MW of windsolar hybrid projects in Gujarat for commercial & industrial consumers, like we have just done at Vilayat,
Bharuch,” added Bansal.
Gujarat is one of the states that has aggressively supported corporate adoption of clean energy. It notified
its solar policy in 2009 and was the first state to announce a hybrid policy in 2018. It has made hybrid plants
attractive for investments by corporates by providing incentives such as a waiver on electricity duty and
creating an enabling environment for corporates to tie up with renewable energy leaderslike ReNew to meet
captive power requirements. Hybrid projects offer higher energy for a given capacity (i.e., more units/MW),
compared to standalone solar or wind projects, and help overcome any variability in renewable energy power
supply.

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