At its 48th Annual General Meeting, Reliance Industries marked a milestone in India’s green journey. Anant Ambani declared the New Energy business as the company’s most transformational mission of the decade, while Mukesh Ambani expressed confidence in setting global benchmarks through operational excellence.
The Dhirubhai Ambani Giga Energy Complex in Jamnagar is being constructed at an unprecedented pace. With 44 million sq. ft. of building area—four times Tesla’s Gigafactory—7 lakh tonnes of steel, and 1 lakh km of cables, the project symbolizes scale and ambition. Over 5 million manhours of engineering have already gone into the facility.
Reliance is building a “sand to electrons to green molecules” ecosystem. The giga factories will produce solar modules, batteries, and electrolysers, delivering renewable power, green hydrogen, ammonia, e-methanol, and sustainable aviation fuel. Together, these facilities create a competitive edge in technology, cost, and supply chain resilience.
Reliance has already rolled out its first 200 MW of advanced HJT solar modules, with 10% higher energy yield and 25% lower degradation. The solar platform will scale up to 20 GWp, making it the world’s largest single-site solar facility. A battery giga factory (40–100 GWh capacity) and electrolyser giga factory (up to 3 GW) will come online in 2026.
In Kutch, Reliance is developing a 5,50,000-acre solar project, capable of meeting 10% of India’s electricity demand within the decade. Alongside, it plans to produce and export 3 MMTPA of green hydrogen equivalent by 2032, positioning India as a global hub for clean fuels.
Mukesh Ambani summed it up powerfully: Jamnagar will host both the world’s largest conventional energy complex and the world’s largest new energy complex. It stands as the face of New Reliance and New India.