India is in the middle of a bold, new and necessary transformation! This transformation is known to reshape how the nation will produce, distribute and consume energy. We live in times of increasing global climate concerns as well as energy demands. At such times, our nation has committed to an ambitious roadmap:
But this revolution that we speak of is not about numbers or policies. This revolution is about building green infrastructure on ground. This includes solar plants, energy storage systems, hydrogen production units, and smart transmission networks. And at the heart of this all are some companies that have the ability and conviction to lead.
Advait Energy Transitions Limited (AETL) is one such company. With its deep roots in engineering and infrastructure, AETL has a growing portfolio in renewables and hydrogen. In fact, Advait is playing an extremely crucial role in shaping the future of India’s green revolution. In this blog, we shall be exploring how India’s green infrastructure boom is unfolding, and how Advait is positioning itself as a future enabler in this national mission.
“We know: a future without fossil fuels can only be achieved through a fundamental transformation of the industry. Together with our customers, partners and employees, we are at the forefront of this change”
It’s important to understand that India’s green infrastructure boom isn’t just a trend! In fact, it’s a necessity that is driven by environmental urgency, economic opportunity, and national ambition. The world’s most populous nation and one of the world’s fastest-growing economies has the twofold mission of fuelling growth and cutting emissions. Green infrastructure is the bridge between the two missions.
Let’s understand the meaning of “Green Infrastructure” in today’s India.
This massive push is not just about tech alone. It’s about speed, scale, and most importantly, sustainability. From the corporates to the startups, from the public sector entities to the private EPC companies, the ecosystem is preparing rapidly to make India the clean energy leader.
Out of all the above players, Advait stands alone in its early market entry, hands-on experience, and integrated project design, manufacture, execution, and advisory—essentially all elements of future-proof green infrastructure.
Before entering the clean energy sector, Advait also built infrastructure prowess. The firm, with over 400 projects across more than 45+ countries, has built up the capability of doing work on transmission of power, telecom infrastructure, substations, and EPC work. This engineering expertise came in quite handily to Advait when it entered the clean energy sector.
Year 2023 marked the group’s futuristic and smart move—setting up Advait Energy Transitions Limited (AETL). This marked the beginning of AETL entering the green hydrogen segment, Solar EPC, and the storage of energy. This was not just a move to diversify businesses, but a mission-oriented transformation to contribute to the climate targets of India and the country’s energy self-reliance.
What makes Advait stand out is its comprehensive model. Whereas most others target just a portion of the green energy value chain, Advait has its bases all covered—all the way from engineering and manufacture to execution and after-commissioning advisory.
A short time span has seen the organization evolve from being a trusted infrastructure provider to being an industry first-mover in the green hydrogen economy of India and a serious player in carbon and solar management services.
Advait has been one of the first movers in the green hydrogen market of India. And this is not only in aspiration, but in ground-level execution.
“Enabling Projects from Vision to reality”
2024 also marked the company providing a 1 MW alkaline electrolyser to KP Green Hydrogen in Bharuch. It produces 200 Nm³/hr of 99.999% pure hydrogen, making it one of the first operational, commercial-scale deployments of an electrolyser in India.
Earlier, it commissioned a microgrid-assisted green hydrogen pilot for THDC in Rishikesh with a 300kW electrolyser and a 70kW fuel cell. This marked another first-of-its-kind project in India.
Its largest move so far was in January 2025, in executing a MoU with Haryana City Gas for the construction of a 2,000 MTPA green hydrogen facility, with a 15 MW electrolyser and all the associated EPC, BoP, O&M and advisory services.
Minimising import reliance was the objective through the launch in mid-2025 of Advaiteco Technologies, the all-wheel subsidiary to manufacture electrolysers, fuel-cell stacks, fuelling stations, storage units and ancillaries.
It currently operates a 120 MW/year electrolyser facility in Kadi, Gujarat and is looking to grow to 200 MW/year according to India’s SECI-PLI programme. To stay ahead in technology, Advait has:
These steps strengthen Advait’s position as a self-reliant green tech manufacturer.
Advait’s green aspiration goes beyond hydrogen. It provides solar EPC solutions for large ticket plants, provides energy storage systems and offers carbon credit advisory.
It now has over 4 million carbon credits and is looking towards 80 million+ by 2027. It also takes into account JV opportunities in green ammonia, methanol, and storage of hydrogen, setting up the complete ecosystem for the roll-out of clean energies.
Here are the things Advait plans to do in the next 10 years:
With executive experience, in-house production, and policy-consistent strategy, Advait shall be the green infrastructure route of India’s mainstay.
India’s green infrastructure revolution is underway, and Advait is building it! From commercial-scale deployments of electrolyser to MoUs on offtakes, possessing production capacity and best-in-class technology partnerships, Advait is executing what others only strategise.
Advait is not only being a part of India’s clean energy future, but also helping shape it.