Sagar Adani announced the commissioning of a 3.37 gigawatt-hour (GWh) battery storage system to enhance India's clean-energy infrastructure [1].
This development is critical because large-scale storage allows renewable energy to remain reliable regardless of weather or time of day. By mitigating the intermittent nature of wind and solar power, the system supports the broader goal of faster electrification and national energy security.
Speaking at the inaugural Adani Green Energy Dialogue in London, Adani said that renewables combined with large-scale storage must take center stage in clean-energy strategies. He said that this approach is essential for providing round-the-clock clean power and meeting climate-commitment goals.
The newly commissioned system is located in Khavda, Gujarat [2]. While some reports describe it as the world's largest single-location battery storage system [1], others characterize it as one of the largest such systems globally [3].
Adani said that faster electrification is an imperative for energy security. The integration of such high-capacity storage is intended to stabilize the grid as more renewable sources are added to the national mix.
The project represents a shift toward integrated energy solutions, where generation and storage are managed as a single unit, to ensure a consistent power supply. This transition is viewed as a necessary step to reduce reliance on fossil-fuel-based peaking plants that typically fill gaps in renewable generation.
“Renewables combined with large-scale storage must take center stage in clean-energy strategies.”
The deployment of a 3.37 GWh storage facility signals a transition from simple renewable generation to grid-scale stability. By addressing the 'intermittency gap,' Adani Green is positioning itself to provide baseload-like reliability from green sources, which is a prerequisite for decarbonizing heavy industry and ensuring a stable national power grid.


