Sunday, June 21, 2026

Home News Indore Municipal Corporation Commissions 60 MW Solar Plant Funded Through Green Bonds
Sineng

Indore Municipal Corporation Commissions 60 MW Solar Plant Funded Through Green Bonds

1
265
Representational image. Credit: Canva

Indore Municipal Corporation has commissioned a 60 MW captive solar power plant in Jalud, Khargone district, marking a significant step in municipal renewable energy adoption and green finance innovation in India.

Growatt

The solar project was inaugurated by Mohan Yadav and is being described as one of Indiaโ€™s first municipal renewable energy projects financed through green bonds. The project was developed at a total cost of โ‚น271.16 crore, of which โ‚น244 crore was raised by IMC through green bonds, while an additional โ‚น42 crore was supported by the central government.

The captive solar plant has been developed to power the civic bodyโ€™s Narmada water pumping operations, one of the municipalityโ€™s largest energy-consuming services. Officials said the plant is expected to significantly reduce IMCโ€™s electricity expenditure, with estimated monthly savings of around โ‚น4โ€“5 crore by replacing conventional grid power with solar energy.

The facility is projected to generate approximately 9.6 crore units of electricity annually and reduce nearly 1.46 lakh tonnes of carbon emissions every year, strengthening Indoreโ€™s climate and sustainability goals. The project is also expected to create carbon credit revenue for the municipal corporation, adding another financial benefit to the renewable energy initiative.

Also Read  European Energy Secures Up To โ‚ฌ228 Million To Expand Green Hydrogen Production In Denmark

State officials said the project sets a new benchmark for urban local bodies by integrating renewable energy with essential civic infrastructure while leveraging innovative financing models to improve long-term operational sustainability.

The commissioning of the solar plant is expected to serve as a model for other municipalities looking to reduce energy costs, improve energy security, and advance urban decarbonisation through clean energy infrastructure.

1 COMMENT

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from SolarQuarter

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading