Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to Adani Green Energy Limited Q2 and H1 FY 2026 conference call, hosted by Emkay Global Financial Services Limited. As a reminder, all participant clients will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touchtone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Sabari Hazarika from Emkay Global Financial Services Limited. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Yeah, thanks, Swapnali. Good afternoon, everyone. On behalf of Emkay Global Financial Services, I welcome you all to the Q2 and H1 FY 2026 Post-earnings Conference Call of Adani Green Energy Limited. We have the company represented by the senior management. Today's session would be brief on the results, followed by question and answer round. Now I would like to hand over the call to Viral Raval, Head, Investor Relations, for the introduction of management and opening remarks. Over to you, Viral.
Thank you, Sabari. I once again welcome all the participants to our Q2 and H1 FY 2026 Earnings Call. With me, I have Mr. Ashish Khanna, CEO of the company; Mr. Saurabh Shah, the CFO; Mr. Raj Kumar Jain, the Head of Business Development. We hope you would have gotten the time to go through our earnings presentation, and once Mr. Ashish Khanna finishes his opening remarks, please feel free to ask any questions. Thank you. Handing over to Mr. Ashish Khanna. Thanks.
Thank you, Viral. Thanks, Sabari. Good afternoon, everyone. I'm pleased to announce Adani Green Energy's outstanding operational and financial performance for the first half of fiscal year 2026, marking another six months of record-breaking growth and execution. Our energy sales rose by an impressive 39% year-on-year, reaching 19.6 billion units. This remarkable achievement is underpinned by strong greenfield capacity additions and operational excellence. Our renewable energy capacity expanded by 49% year-on-year to 16.7 GW, solidifying our position as India's largest and fastest growing pure-play renewable energy company. In H1 FY 2026, we set a new milestone by adding 2.4 GW of greenfield capacity. This represents 74% of total capacity addition in entire FY 2025. We remain firmly on track to achieve our targeted 50 GW capacity by 2030.
We are making steady progress in the development of world's largest renewable energy plant at Khavda, Gujarat, with a 7.1 GW solar, wind, and hybrid assets, including 661 MW of grid projects already in operations. Adani Green Energy continues to deliver industry-leading financial results. Revenue from power supply increased by 26% year-on-year to INR 6,088 crore, and EBITDA grew by 25% to INR 5,651 crores. Our EBITDA margin remains best in class at 92%, and cash profit surged by 17% year-on-year to INR 3,904 crores. These results are driven by our relentless focus on advanced renewable energy technologies and digitizing our operations. Our operations and maintenance are powered by sophisticated data analytics, machine learning, and artificial intelligence, enabling real-time monitoring and consistent higher plant availability.
Adani Green Energy's commitment to sustainability and responsible business practices continues to be recognized globally. We ranked first in India and seventh globally in renewable energy sector in latest ESG assessment by Sustainalytics. Additionally, we were honored as Energy Transition Company and Energy Company of the Year in renewables category at recent ET Energy Leadership Awards. We also received the Best Wind Project Awards for Khavda at recent Mercom Summit. As we look ahead, we remain committed to leading India's energy transition and enabling large-scale adoption of affordable, clean energy. Through innovation, operational excellence, and unwavering dedication to ESG principles, Adani Green Energy is powering sustainable growth for India and the world. We now thank you for your presence, and we'll be looking forward for your queries.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touchtone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. The first question is from the line of Anuj Upadhyay from Investec. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi, sir, and congratulations on a good set of numbers. My first question was on capacity expansions. In the first half, we have already commissioned 2.4 GW, and we had guided for 5 GW addition in the first second half, which is generally considered to be a strong figure. So any probability where we can scale up our guidance for the full year? And, second question is related to the evacuation challenges. If you can throw some light how those challenges are placed as of now, which again, gives us the confidence of adding 5 GW plus kind of a capacity.
Thanks, Anuj. I think we are committed to the 5 GW, and I think we would like to first achieve that before saying anything else on the future capacities. There always has been challenges, which I think our team has done a phenomenal job in the first half of this year, in spite of heavy rains, and in between, we also have a war in this particular H1. We have been on track to achieve 5 GW more, 5 GW in this year, and if there is anything which can be done beyond it, we will come back to you. But currently we are directionally totally committed to definitely achieve 5 GW in this financial year.
Regarding the challenges with respect to evacuation, I think, you know, you have to appreciate the fact that these evacuations doesn't come in a 250 MW or 750 MW tranches. It comes generally in a 3 GW or 5 GW tranches or 2.5 GW tranches. So if you map, if you time that across, then either you first wait for that evacuation to be there and then you build your assets, or you build it in a time where you are more or less there when this evacuation comes, and take advantage from day one of the same. In the current context, yes, there have been certain delays from the anticipation which we had, and we map it very closely.
We work very closely with all those who are involved, besides the government of India, but all those otherwise also who are involved, in this evacuation process. All the stakeholders, we map them very closely. We have a great relationship with them, and we know exactly what's happening out there, and accordingly, we do time our projects, too. But like we said, in the current context, there has been a challenge, but that's hardly less than 5% on our total effect as we speak right now. We do expect another 2.5 GW or more than that coming in this particular H2 of further evacuation. And in totality, if you look out another nine months, we are expecting somewhere close to 17 GW of a capacity coming from Harba itself. Now, with this in place, we don't foresee.
There will be always a challenge of a month or two, at max, a quarter here and there, but we are committed for our particular installations, our investments, and our execution capabilities. And then further on, we are mapping very closely. And with a few months here and there, I think we are comfortable in the way the evacuation will take place on overall basis. Because if you look at it, currently we are focusing more on Rajasthan and Khavda. These are the two places, which are where we currently are having our maximum execution of future coming in the next one or two years. And accordingly, I think we don't foresee a major challenge considering the progress which is happening on ground, on this evacuation.
Yeah, that's pretty helpful, sir. So, next question is on the margin side. I believe during the quarter, the margin boosts were largely led by higher contribution from the non-PPA segment, that is your merchant, C&I, and the CFD side. So, my sense basically was the merchant realization was down during the quarter, but it's largely has been led by higher volume of the merchant, which has contributed to the EBITDA. Could you just clarify on this part, sir? How exactly, you know, the non-PPA segment has played its role in scaling up the margin here?
No, I don't think so. It is an element of a non-PPA segment per se. You will also realize that when you are talking about merchant, you might have taken into consideration the infirm power, too. Now, this infirm power, which is being currently sold at the merchant, is primarily an add-on to our PPAs. Now, we are ahead of our commitments, and we are selling this majority of this power ahead of. And these are add-on to our overall returns because our PPAs are for 25 years once they are operationalized. So our coming ahead of the timeline is helping the organization to add more from the business case perspective, and that is where you would have found that vis-à-vis the PPA, the merchant is contributing more.
I think as and when these PPAs get operationalized, they will be converted to the PPA power, and then it will be reflected on our balance sheet itself.
Okay. And lastly, sir, just can you clarify on the average realization which we got on this, in form of the merchant realization, merchant sales?
Exact numbers?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, the exact numbers from a solar perspective, the my average merchant realization was INR 2.1 per unit, plus the RECs that we earn on that, so that's another 35 paisa per unit. And from wind perspective, it is INR 5.13 per unit, plus the RECs. So from that aspect, that's how the. So on an average, because we have about 35% of wind as our merchant capacity, so from that aspect, that also helps the boosting the overall merchant realization.
Yep. Thank you, sir. Thank you very much.
I'd again reemphasize that the point that these are the add-ons from the point of PPAs, if you look at it. On overall business plan, these are helping us to earn more, by executing early.
Yeah. That was my question, sir. It was a clarification. Thank you.
You're welcome.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Puneet Gulati from HSBC. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you so much. My first question is just a bit of clarification on the revenues that you're earning from PPA-based capacity currently sold on merchant basis. You are recognizing it on revenue, you're not capitalizing it, right? Is that understanding correct?
Yes.
Okay. Secondly, if you can also talk about the progress on the PSP side. How much have you spent so far there?
On the physical progress, we are on track as we have been talking about it. We will be, I think, coming out with the PSP first, in the shortest time ever possible. The first one is expected to come in the coming calendar year itself, and others are also on track. So we are very much on track as well as the execution of these PSPs are concerned. With respect to the exact number on the spends, if you are looking at it, I think the total-
Yeah.
See, the thing is that our first project, which is at Chitravathi, of 500 MW of PSP, it's progressing well. It is about 57% odd completed in terms of physical progress. And as per the overall project cost is about, I think about INR 5,270 crore. So that's how the overall progress has been on that.
Sorry, I couldn't hear. What is the cost you said?
So INR 2,600 crore is the overall-
Okay.
cost of the project.
Okay.
Out of which, physical progress has been 57%. So if you look at it, Puneet, it is coming at a cost of around INR 5.1 crore-INR 5.2 crore-
Yeah.
per MW. It's very cost effective from a cost standpoint.
Will it be fair to assume you use it for merchant and there's no PPA? Yeah.
No, I'm saying since. I was just continuing, since it's a smaller project, our larger projects of 1,800 MW are even more cost-effective on that.
Okay. Okay, and will it be fair to assume that this is largely prepared for merchant and there's no PPA at this point of time with this?
So, yes, today we—as we stand, we have not locked it in our PPA, but we keep that flexibility with us, with respect to playing this in the peak power market and extract additional revenue from there, and at the appropriate time, we put that into a contract.
Understood. That's very helpful.
And so is, Puneet, if you ask me on a general question, that is our strategy for all, that wherever we get an opportunity to earn, handsome return on a PPA, the assets are important to be in place. Once the opportunity come, we will take full advantage of that particular opportunity to have the maximum return.
Understood. That's very helpful. And if you can also talk a bit about slightly lower, you know, PLF on the hybrid side. While both wind and solar have done well on year-over-year basis, hybrid has been a tad lower on year-over-year basis. How should one think about that?
You know, I think we. Yes, but I think if you look at it in total, the wind has changed to a little extent in the current context, and I would not be. If you see from a overall standpoint, yes, it's a few basis point less than. But not a very, you know, a lot of it depends on the weather content itself and where they are placed per se.
Just to add, Puneet. So hybrid CUF is also dependent on what kind of solar-wind combination you have. So the new projects have a specific design CUF, which is lower.
Okay.
It is dependent on that also, in addition to what Ashish said.
No, I'm just looking at Q2 2025 versus Q2 2026. Solar is higher, wind is higher PLF, but hybrid is down from 43 to 39.
Hardly, if you look at it, we are at 9%+ on a hybrid on-
Yeah.
-that factor, too. If you look at H1, right?
Yeah.
Hi, we are-
Yeah.
39% +, which is, which is a very decent hybrid. Now, few basis point here and there in this scenario keeps on going up and down.
Puneet, what... Just further elaborating on what Viral was saying. So we have a very intense hybrid when it comes to Rajasthan, where-
Mm-hmm.
On the 700 MW, we have 500+ MW of wind and 600+ MW of solar. So that's a very intense hybrid wind and solar.
The power which is going, that was a unique hybrid which we had set up. The new hybrids which we are setting up are as per the requirements of, the respective PPAs, where such, intensity of solar and wind is not there. So that's where, again, it has to be more specific, seen based on the underlying mix of what hybrids which we are looking at. That's, that's where also the difference is coming.
Understood. That's, that's helpful. And lastly, if you can talk a bit about if you signed any new PPAs during the quarter? There were a few projects which you won early into this year, and late last year. Any progress there?
I think, on overall basis, as we see or know, you know, today we have an LOA of more than 4 GW with us to be converted into the PPAs. Other than that, around 27 GW are there in the PPA, and we are on a track. So we looked it on a more holistic basis on how we are moving towards the 50 GW target. And, every year we have been adding on it. So I didn't get actually what, what number you're looking at, if there is a-
No, just any new LOAs which got converted into PPAs during the quarter?
Oh, yes.
In Q2, specifically, there is no such major development.
Okay.
But on an overall basis, we have converted a lot of LOAs into PPAs in the last six to nine months.
Correct. Understood. That's it. Thank you so much, and all the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Manish Somaiya from Cantor Fitzgerald and Company. Please go ahead.
Thank you and good morning. Just a couple of questions for me, one on CapEx. CapEx was about 18% higher year-over-year, so maybe if you can just help us understand the cadence of CapEx spending in fiscal 2026 and maybe even 2027. And if you can go beyond that, that would be also super helpful.
So, see, from a CapEx perspective, we have visibility for 5 GW of capacity this year, which will translate into a CapEx of about INR 30,000 crores, of which, 2.4 GW has been achieved and accordingly, the CapEx has been spent. From a perspective of next two years, the range would be in that same INR 30,000 crores-INR 35,000 crores of CapEx to be spent each year, because our plants would be in that similar range in terms of the execution, or maybe going a bit higher as we move forward into the next two years. So that's why the range would be between those numbers of INR 30,000 crores-INR 35,000 crores, which translates into $4 billion of CapEx sort of number in that sense.
Okay, that's super helpful. I did see the receivable days improved, and perhaps if you could just kind of give us some color on what is that attributable to? Are you having delays in payments from discoms? Maybe if you can just help us understand that improvement-
So, Manish-
And how sustainable is that?
Yeah. So, Manish, if you look at the annexure on receivables that we have in the earnings presentation, you will see that our overdue receivables, which is basically, any payment beyond the due date, is only four days. This is what I think is important to track, otherwise, every discom continues to pay within the due dates. So it is all on track, is what I have to say.
There is no change-
Okay.
In the, like, number of days from a year's perspective. Last year or last quarter also, it was similar in that sense.
Yeah. So sometimes what happens is, when you look at the overall receivables, which you see, what happens is the not due category fluctuates a little bit, but it is not due. So what matters is what is due and then, if there is a delay.
I see. Okay.
Okay.
Now, that's-
I will also say, Manish, I'll add on it that, you know, we have been tracking it very closely, so if. So far important for us to make sure that we get our payments as they are due and not to be delayed. So there is a huge focus on, on realization of these payments. So if there is any increment or decrement, if you have seen, on the part of our realization in terms of number of days, is also coming from the fact that our teams are very closely monitoring it, and then our realization is also getting better. So it's a continuous process, and I'll, I'm sure you will see, continuous improvement on it, even though it is minor, but our focus is very huge on this.
Okay. No, that, that's super helpful. And then, I was just going through the solar capacity utilization factor, which dipped sequentially. Maybe if you can just allude to why that was. And then just connected to it, the delayed Khavda commissioning in 2Q. How much of that capacity has since come online in Q3? So two questions there.
I think, I'm not sure where you're looking at this. So if you are only speaking from a Q2, yes, there is always a. You know, if you see the monsoon this time has been a bit erratic. Generally, it is not extended to the level it has and doesn't even come to that level. So there has been a weather change, but I think on an overall basis, if you look around, it's not that bad. On a H1 basis, if I look out, you know, in the half yearly, CUF of solar compared to last year, it is better than that. Of course, the weather changes impact that particular part of it. I didn't get your second question. What about this, can you, can you be a bit more elaborate?
Yeah. Sure, sure. No, and apologies for that. So just to clarify, I guess my understanding is that there was some delay pertaining to the Khavda commissioning in 2Q. And I was wondering if that impacted capacity in any fashion, and how much of that has come online in 3Q?
Manish, I think, let me reiterate what we did in this particular H1. We have been, let me again say that we did, the team, the company did 70%, more or less 74% and close to 75% of what it did last year. So I think, we are doing a great job as well as the execution is concerned. If I, if I look around out in, then in the whole of India, no one would have done 2.4 GW in H1. And in spite of, a heavy monsoon, you know, something close to more than 800 MW and close to 900 MW in a quarter is no small deed. Take my word on this, as well as the solar and otherwise is concerned.
So I think we are, we are very proud of what the team has done here, as well as the Q2 is concerned. There are always a scope for improvement. We don't get that idea from where you get this idea that we have been delayed in execution of certain projects. Out of a 5 GW, which we have targeted this year, we are already more than 2.4 GW per se. I think we are on track on an overall basis, including on Q2. Q2 has always been a difficult quarter, not only for us, but for everyone else, too. And still we did a handsome job.
No, and I appreciate the answer. Again, I just wanted to get some clarification, but you have provided that. And just lastly, on leverage, if you can just help us frame leverage as we sort of go ahead, especially with all the CapEx needs that you have, the growth plans that you have. How should we think about leverage, not just in fiscal 2026, but perhaps even a little bit beyond? Thank you so much, and again, congratulations.
Thank you. Thank you. So see, from a leverage perspective, from a net debt to EBITDA, which we track on a continuous basis, net debt to run rate EBITDA, we from an operational asset perspective, we are at 4.4 x of net debt to run rate EBITDA. And including the under construction debt, we are at 5 x, 5.1 x full asset on the net debt to run rate EBITDA number. So from that aspect, for another two to three years, because of the kind of CapEx that we are continuing to do, we will be in the range between four to five times of net debt to run rate EBITDA and continue to be there around that. But as we get closer to 2029 onwards, the number will drastically start to reduce because the CapEx would have all come on online.
See, the other way of looking at this is that today, earlier, we were doing about 10 GW or 11 GW of operating capacity or 4 GW-5 GW of construction. Today, we are at seventeen GW of operating capacity. We are doing 4 GW-5 GW of construction on a continuous basis, and that number of operational EBITDA number and the run rate EBITDA will continue to grow higher than the debt impact. So from that aspect, the overall number should start, continue to go on a downward trajectory, and it will fall sharply from 2029 onwards. Hope I'm able to answer that.
Okay. Yes, thank you so much. Again, I appreciate the time.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Mohit Kumar from ICICI Securities. Please go ahead.
Yes. Good morning, sir, and thanks for the opportunity. My first question is on the EBITDA for the current quarter. If you remove the other income, the EBITDA was INR 26 billion. For the last quarter, it was INR 30 billion, right? And, the question is, if we had guided for a run rate EBITDA of INR 136 billion for the portfolio, which got commissioned by the end of Q1 FY 2026, right? Which amounts to roughly INR 34 billion per quarter. Of course, this quarter we had monsoon, but is it fair to assume that as we enter Q3 and Q4, where run rate EBITDA of INR 34 billion per quarter will be achieved?
Yes, definitely, Mohit.
My second question in this particular quarter, I think there's slide number 17, slide 17 of the presentation, which talks about the grid availability for the solar in particular has declined significantly, right? It was last quarter, I think Q1, it was 97%. I show 89%, right? That number is, is it that the, the, this particular monsoon, there was too much of curtailment in this quarter, and we expect this to be corrected as we go forward?
No, I think, Mohit, we have spoken about the curtailment part of it. You know, there has been, there cannot be exact timing, but yes, there would be always a month here and there. But we are on a track and on our overall basis from the returns part, we are definitely going to meet and surpass the returns. If you look at the-
The only question, 89% is very, very high, right, compared to last quarter, 97.
No, that's what I'm saying. If you look at the notes below, you realize that this time we have also included the external grid in it. That is where you have seen differentials from the earlier reportings to this, which has been clarified in the notes, too. Now, it takes into consideration external as well as internal grid availability.
Just to add, Mohit, so, this is primarily with respect to new projects which are getting commissioned, which is where Ashish actually explained how there can be a lag, between when the transmission comes up, where versus when I have set up the capacity. But because as we said, the transmission comes up in chunks, it is always better to have your capacity commissioned, right? So sometimes because of this reason, the grid availability may show up to be low on an overall basis, but you are still not really compromising on your return, because this is on the new capacities which are running currently as merchant or infirm. I hope that clarifies?
Yeah, that helps, of course. And, talk of-
So let me also add, since you talk about curtailment, and this is the second question, so I thought, let's, let's address even future questions which can come about it. We do expect, say, in Khavda, by the end of this year, around 10 GW of capacities to be evacuated. And, so that's where we have been speaking about, that whatever we are adding into it, we don't. Are you there?
Yes, yes, sir. Yes, yeah.
Thank you. That whatever we are adding into it, will be evacuated. It's a matter of, timings, of few months, few weeks here and there, which is the impact which you have seen there.
Is it fair to predict that what we're seeing in merchant and the long-term PPAs will get converted into long-term PPA sales by end of this fiscal?
You see, merchant, I wouldn't call it merchant, we call it infirm power. It's the same thing which we are talking about here. It all depends on when the PPAs are getting operationalized. And these PPAs get operationalized at a particular time frame. I think we can't say that all of them is going to be operationalized because there are certain elements on the whole evacuation system which are required. It's not only evacuating from Khavda or from that particular project. The further elements are also required to be in place before the PPAs are operationalized. So they are going to be operationalized in a sequencing manner as we progress in this quarter and next quarter.
My last question, what is the gross block at the end of the H1 FY 2026? Is it, my number is roughly around INR 1.1 trillion. Is that number right?
So in terms of-
INR 100,000 crore.
Rupees, the overall gross block is at about INR 100,000 crore, INR 110,000 crore including the CWIP. Without CWIP, on a gross block very specific basis, it is INR 94,000 crore, plus a CWIP of INR 16,000 crore, which is to be added to that in terms of under construction projects.
INR 94,000 crore is gross block for all the operational portfolio of around 16.7 GW. Is that number right?
Yes. Yes, yes.
Understood, sir. Thank you and all the best, sir. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Aniket Mittal from SBI Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you for the opportunity. My first question was actually just on the overall tendering sector. We've seen a bit slowdown this year compared to the past two years. Just wanted your thoughts on that going forward. How do you look at tendering within renewables at a country level, say, for the next couple of years?
I think, I was just too brief before I joined. I think important factor, Ankit, is Aniket, sorry, is not tendering it, is important factor is how much of those tenders are converted into the power purchase agreement. I think that is the important factor. We are also seeing a shift coming from a pure play solar, pure play wind, to now a peak power type of tender, where the storage is playing an important role. And, we do foresee more and more of, round-the-clock power or peak power type, which is coming from renewable. Conversion of the current tender, yes, we are blessed not to have many, hardly 4 GW is where we have our LOAs, which are going to be converted to PPAs.
But yet, on an overall basis, there have been certain tenders, which have not been converted to PPAs for some time. But if you are looking for the next two years, our view is that we will have more tenders coming with the peak power or a storage power as a component to it, rather than a pure play solar. And they will, of course, be, converted into PPAs per se. Raj, you would like to add?
No. I think,
Further, Puneet, is that you will see such cycles. You will see lot of activity happening in a particular year, sometimes lot of aggression from some of the market players, and then, that going down, and then, there is a different kind of opportunity, opportunities emerging. So I think, from a maturity angle, Adani Green is very clear in its strategy that it dips into these, tendering process when it feels it, when it realizes that it is right to do it, and it is allowing us to have a, higher return projects, with us. So we have seen such cycles in past and have, ensured that our strategies pay off for us.
Got it. In this view of that, how do you look at the current competition in place? We're seeing a lot of tenders, like you said, you know, come out on that, solar storage basis, and we tend to be shy of participating in that. So just wanted to understand your view on the competition and space right now.
So I think, it, it's not a question of shy of participating, and I think, there were, our track record says how much, contract we have in hand. It's a question of our strategy, how we want to be in that market. Now, coming to the first part of your question, in terms of participation, just because the way potentially some of these storage contracts are coming in, the, the value at it can be broken, 50 MW- 100 MW, allows lot of people, to participate and actually be very, very competitive. The conventional players in these tenders are not necessarily the big, participants, because they are seeing some aggression happening in these tenders. But I think it's what the market is.
You will see some of these round-off things happening, if not things normalizing, and the market again maturing.
If I can add on, Raj, here, the question is not only on the participation part. I think we are on a long race out here. There is enough opportunities for anyone. The important factor is that at what return profile we would like to bid and then execute projects. You will also appreciate the fact that we are an organization who invest for a long-term basis and not looking for a mile, competing with those who on a platform basis, with a 50 MW or 100 MW bids for very different reasons. Each organization has very different reasons for what they are doing. There are some smaller players, too.
From our standpoint, it is important that our return profile is met wherever we are going, and we do foresee that there are enough opportunities for us to go, rather than just dipping a slow for the heck of optics.
Got that, and that's pretty helpful. Just circling back to the, you know, earlier question on grid constraint. Would you, would you be able to quantify that? So let's say, had these grid constraints not occurred, how much higher would our overall generation be for us in this quarter?
We have already mentioned that this total impact is actually less than 5%, and that is the impact of all this curtailment, which is having on our vector.
And the other standard part of that, so do you quantify the capacity here? So what's the overall capacity that is being currently sold as informed power?
It is 4.8 GW.
4.8 GW is informed or pre-secured.
Got it. Got it. I just had one last question on the PSP front. You touched upon the Andhra Pradesh, but just on the UP, could you give some clarity in terms of how the CapEx will phase out over there? It's a very large project. You know, that would be helpful to understand.
Yeah, yeah. So I think, it's, it has a timeline of six years broadly from the day we signed the PSA. So obviously the CapEx would be heavy towards the end of last three years. And prior to that, obviously the advances with respect to ordering, et cetera, would go. And obviously there is a CapEx on the land side, some of the pre-development costs. So that's what is expected in the first three years more, and then the real CapEx would come in. So we don't expect too much of that happening within the next couple of years.
Yeah, if you look at the overall cycle, too, like Raj said, it initially more on the land and the advances which have to be given for the equipment parts, and then we have a continuous civil work which comes. And at the end in the last years, when the equipment start coming and being installed, we again have upstream on the CapEx. That's the typical you would be knowing about the CapEx profile for these infrastructure projects.
Got it. So thank you for that input. Yeah, those were my questions. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Bharani V. from Avendus Spark. Please go ahead.
Yeah, good afternoon. Am I audible?
Yes, you are, sir.
Okay, great. So my question is around our strategy with respect to BESS. If I see our total portfolio that we want to achieve, which is 50 GW, the hybrid component is 5%, which is 2.5 GW. Even in the current portfolio, or the under consideration portfolio, we are not significantly present in BESS. This question is pertaining to the fact that the recent tenders and looks like upcoming tenders will have a lot of hybrid component, especially with the BESS component. So wanted to understand your view... Though you mentioned in the earlier answer that, you know, the competition is high, the project sizes are smaller, lower, and, you know, it's not conducive for a large player for us.
But, still, is there any strategy around BESS for us which will change our, our mix of the gigawatts, more towards that? That's my question. Thank you.
Ranji, let me clarify one thing, on the part, where there was an earlier question about. We decided not to win those projects, it's not that we could not have won those projects. Let's be clear about it. It was our decision not to win, for the reasons which we stated. We could have always done that. We have the capabilities. Regarding BESS, we are developing it. We are developing it and, knowing our company, it is at a scale which would be unprecedented in our country. Having said that, I think at an appropriate time, we will share with you what we are doing, in the current year and in future too, on the BESS per se. Plus.
But please be reassured in this timeframe that Adani Green is working and developing BESS, and also at a scale which I shared with you will be unprecedented in this country as of now.
Okay. So does that mean that this plan that you're working on is not in the current numbers, the 50 GW?
No. No, it is not. It is not in the current number.
We will come out with a full strategy around BESS in-
In short.
Yeah.
Right. Right. So some color on how the economics work there. Of course, we know the landed cost of storage plus solar, et cetera. If you can throw some light on some economics on the overall BESS-
I-
-storage.
Ranji, we told you that the tenders which are there, we decided not to win. It was not that we could not have won. That's a statement. So you know the numbers which are there in the market. The second point is, you have to appreciate a fact that we are so nicely placed, if I look it from a competition standpoint or our competitive advantage standpoint. We have solar power available with us, we have our own, we have our own land, where we can always install BESS. So from strategic standpoint, we are very well-placed from any other competitive standpoint, if you ask me. Regarding the numbers, like it happens or what has happened in the solar module case, the BESS's improvement in technology and their pricing is also going down. We are very conscious of it.
We are going to take advantage of it too, and we are taking advantage of it. So we do foresee that this is the future, and we are working very closely with big manufacturers in this particular category to play a very important role and a critical role. As the way we are playing in renewable pure play segment, we will be playing a similar role in this BESS category, too. But like I said, we will announce it shortly about our whole strategy towards BESS. We have already shared with you on the PSP basis, on what we are doing on PSP and another form of storage. BESS also we are developing and we will be sharing shortly.
Yeah, okay. Loud and clear. Thank you so much.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Nikhil Nigania from Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Hi, thank you for taking my question. My first question is, on the pipeline of PPA signed projects. I wanted to understand the module sourcing requirements for that. Am I fair to understand that the solar plus manufacturing PPA, you are still allowed to import Chinese modules, and for the Maharashtra PPA, you don't need to meet a domestic cell module requirement given the timing of those bids?
Yes. Yes, Nikhil.
Got it.
The second-
The second, yeah, please.
Yeah, Nikhil, you're right. Your understanding is correct.
Understood.
Yeah.
For the merchant solar that you have been adding, for that also, are Chinese modules allowed or?
So, Nikhil, the way the law of the land is, the bids which happened prior to somewhere early 2021, we are allowed to import Chinese modules. So that's where bulk of our portfolio plays and we are importing there. The bids which happened after that, there we have the requirement of ALMM after, if those plants are commissioned after first April 2024. So in all those cases, including Maharashtra and lot of other LOAs, which we have in our hand, ALMM is the requirement. Recently, the government has introduced the requirement for the ALCM, where for projects which are commissioned after first June 2026.
So any merchant, any projects for which the bids were concluded few months back and where the ALCM required, where the after that period, whatever the bids are there, they where there we need to have ALCM, which means cells have to be done in India. All merchant projects, which we are doing from first of April 2024 until first June of 2026, would need, can import cells from outside India, and after that, the the cells has to be done in India. So that's, that's the overall regulatory space, and that's how we have planned our sourcing.
Makes sense. And just so, is that a reason why we see a lot of merchant solar getting added to take benefit of this and the transmission charge waiver? Is that rational why we are adding merchant? Okay.
It's not only rational for us, but you would have realized it's rational for everyone. In the Q1, before June, there have been major developments and execution of projects and commissioning of projects to take advantage of the ISTS waiver, and that will continue.
Makes sense. The second question I had was on the curtailment. Apologies for bringing it up again, but just wanted some clarification. The curtailment data we are seeing is, in the ancillary market, it's dragged down, volume. So just wanted to clarify, there is no compensation being given, for this, curtailment, that we are looking?
On PPAs, where we have scheduled power and it is curtailed, we get a deemed generation as such.
Correct. But most of the curtailment, in terms of priority, should be temporary GNA, only then, the PPA side. So is it fair to assume the curtailment is being seen primarily on the temporary GNA side, with the informed power or the merchant power?
Yes, that's the fundamental across all over India, which is applicable to all places. But if you look around, and if I say in Khavda too, if that is your point of concern, then there is all around DGNE itself. Most of the power which is coming from us and others is on a DGNE basis, so there is no inequalities as of now.
Understood. Understood. Got it. And the last question I had, just on the informed power side, as you said earlier, the revenues are not getting capitalized there in the P&L. And similarly, I'm getting the financing cost when and everything is going through the P&L as well.
Yeah, it all goes to P.
Everything goes to the P. Perfect. Perfect. Thank you. Those were my questions. Thank you for answering them.
Thank you, Nikhil.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Baijul Joshi from Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Hello. Thank you for the opportunity. Most of my questions have been answered. Just have a small couple of questions. Firstly, on the partnership that AdaniConneX and Google have for the AI data center campus in Vizag. Wanted to understand AdaniConneX 's role in it, since the release specifically highlights the use of renewables. So any color around it would be great.
I think, it's currently too premature to actually give a proper strategy around it. As it evolves, obviously, as a group, we are very rich in terms of providing multiple solutions, including 24x7 power, which can be green power. And, we believe that is something which will be valued by this partnership, and we'll be able to support the green ambitions which this particular venture will have.
Okay, perfect. Thank you. That helps.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Bhavik Shah from Invexa Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. I actually, I missed the initial part, so what is the guidance for the current year?
With respect to our project, projects, we are looking at 5 GW. That's what is our commitment.
Okay. So we are seeing INR 30,000 crore of CapEx of 5 GW, and next two years, we are saying we'll have around CapEx of INR 30,000 crore-35,000 crore. So for next two years also, we'll have similar 5 GW-6 GW of, say, capacities coming up, and more of our capacities will be, say, backended in 2029 and 2030?
So exact capacities, we will talk about this thing during the Q3 or Q4 results. But, as such, it will always be going higher as we move forward into the next years.
All right.
We have to appreciate the fact that, you know, the, the world comes cheap, so we would like to first demonstrate what we are doing, and then closer to the next year, we will have a projection for the coming year also.
Sure. Sure, sir. Thank you so much. That is helpful.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Siddharth K. from Tusk Investment. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, sir. Sir, I've joined the call a little late. So can you please tell us what were the merchant prices for this quarter and for H1 compared to year, last year?
For the current six months, the average merchant price for solar was INR 2.1 per unit, and for wind it was INR 5.13 per unit. Within the merchant capacities, about 34% of our capacities are wind merchant. So from that aspect, that is how the entire works, well, it works, merchant capacity perspective.
Basically the split between the solar and wind is 70/30 in the merchant space?
No, 65, so the 65 would be the closer one.
65/ 35. So is it fair to say the blended merchant price will be close to INR 3.5?
Yes. Yes.
Okay. Sir, regarding the capacity utilization, sir, like, this H1, we saw that solar because of, because of obvious prolonged monsoon, it was around 24.5%.
So, and the wind was obviously higher. So, on a full year basis, sir, how should we project this number, sir, for solar and as well as wind on a, like, on a stable basis?
So if you, if you look at it, on an overall basis, we should be 100-100 basis points more than the last year. Because if you even compare the H1 solar of last year compared to H1 of this year, I'm not going into quarter, because, you know, weather cannot be determined on the way the quarter works, in the calendar year. But we are definitely expecting 100-200 basis points more than last year. It is also coming from the fact that, our site at Khavda will play a decent role in also in enhancing the CF of the overall capacity. Since our capacities are more and more capacities are coming in Khavda, which has a much better CF of solar compared to our earlier plants.
Yeah. And similarly for solar also?
Yeah, I was talking about solar.
So sorry, so for wind also, sir.
Wind too. We do, we do expect a better one. This time the wind has not been good as of now, from last year to this year. But yes, we do expect it to be on a similar range like last year. Last year has been phenomenally good. We do foresee this year at least to meet that one.
Right. Because there was a on the presentation, it was written that in the Khavda region, the wind touched 42% of CF this year.
Yes, it has.
Okay. Okay. My last question is, sir, so since the government has stopped doing clean vanilla solar tenders, so how much of our capacity is already blocked? Is it like we should be bothered beyond the 50 GW of target, which we have for FY 2030, or do we need to consider after the first 30 GW?
So look, I think you can't look at all our 50 GW is not all solar or minus 30 GW is all solar. Our capacities, you know, currently there has been a solar PPA, which we are on, which the government is honoring, and it's an agreement between the parties, which everyone is honoring and we have placed it. I think there will be also an element that solar remains the least cost input power, and as and when the time moves on, solar will be more utilized for an input power for the storage. That's how we will see in the next five years, the movement of solar coming across. More and more, like you rightly said, you won't have a pure play solar tender, but there would be a solar requirement as an input power to all the storages.
That remains the least cost option as we have. So let's not discount solar, that it's going to go off. We are blessed with the best of solar in this country, and if you look out, our tariffs are the best. You know, we are currently talking about $0.03 or less than that on a solar basis. It is a great source of power, which can be utilized in multiple facets, not only for just providing the power during the daytime, but also for the storage capacities input power.
Right, sir. Thank you, sir. That, that's all.
Thank you. Participants are requested to restrict their questions, one per participant, to ensure that the management will be able to address questions from all the participants in the conference call. The next question comes from the line of Puneet Gulati from HSBC. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thank you for the follow-up. On your current capacity, can you share what is the run rate EBITDA? And will it be fair to assume that a lot of capacity which has come in over the last six months is largely the 2.42 solar one?
Yeah. So the run rate EBITDA that we are guiding is about INR 14,100 crore for, from a power sale perspective, and,
Mm-hmm.
From an overall perspective, and majorly, yes, from a solar perspective, that number between INR 2.4-2.5 INR per unit is the number. Correct.
Okay. And what is the cost coming for that, those solar plants business?
So our solar cost, that is CapEx, if you are asking, then the-
Yeah, yeah.
CapEx is basically INR 4.5 crore, INR 4 crore-INR 4.5 crore between that per MW. That's what the, that's the number.
Understood. That's very helpful. Thank you so much.
You're welcome.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question for today. I now hand the conference back to the management for closing comments. Over to you, sir.
I think, thank you for all of you for participating into this. I think we are in a very exciting phase. This particular quarter and in the earlier quarter too, the company has demonstrated its execution and operational skills once again, in spite of some very unprecedented challenges which we have encountered in this particular half of the year, whether it was a war or unprecedented monsoons which has struck. I think we are on a track for our commitment on what we have committed. And like we said, we are also on track for our strategies towards the storage part, whether it is BESS or PSP. We are well committed to execute the 50 GW by 2031, 2030.
I think this particular quarter, as well as the last quarter, we are directionally and professionally absolutely right on track. Look forward for your participation in the coming quarters, too, and again, a good performance from this company in the coming quarters. Thank you so much.
Thank you everyone for joining this call. On behalf of the management, I would like to thank Emkay Global and the moderator for facilitating this call. And please feel free to reach out to us for any further questions. Thank you.
On behalf of Adani Green Energy Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us today. I'm Viral, disconnecting-