Tata Power Renewable Energy Limited (TPREL) on Friday commissioned its 100.8 MW Jewali Wind Project in Dharashiv district, Maharashtra, adding to its growing clean energy portfolio. The project will supply electricity to Tata Power Mumbai Distribution and support its Renewable Purchase Obligation compliance.
The facility comprises 28 SG 3.6-145 horizontal-axis wind turbine generators and is expected to produce approximately 299 million units of electricity annually. The project is projected to offset roughly 245 million kg of CO₂ emissions each year, based on an estimated reduction of 0.82 kg of CO₂ per unit generated.
With this addition, TPREL’s wind energy portfolio now exceeds 3.9 GW, of which more than 1.3 GW is operational. Projects under various stages of development span Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu.
TPREL’s total renewable utility capacity has reached 11.6 GW following the commissioning. Of this, 6.7 GW is currently operational — comprising 5.4 GW of solar and 1.3 GW of wind — while 4.9 GW remains under implementation, including 2.1 GW of solar, 2.6 GW of wind, and 0.2 GW of battery energy storage, expected to be commissioned over the next 6–24 months.
The Jewali project is part of Tata Power’s stated goal of achieving 100 per cent clean energy generation by 2045 and Net Zero emissions by the same year.
