Adani Green’s Khavda power plant world’s largest and 5 times the size of Paris

The Adani Group which is engaged in several renewable energy endeavors throughout South Asia, including Sri Lanka announced that Adani Green’s Khavda power plant is the world’s largest and it is  5 times the size of Paris.

The plant is located near a narrow airstrip that doesn’t even have an air traffic controller to guide incoming airplanes and whose only infrastructure is a portable toilet and a make-shift office in a container and when Adani group head, Gautam Adani, who was then the second richest person in the world, first used a small aircraft to reach the barren area that didn’t even have a pin code.

The land hardly had any vegetation due to its highly saline soil, leave alone any habitation. But gautam Adani and his executives saw the potential that the area had.

An 18-km drive from the airstrip through dusty arid land is the site for his group’s Khavda renewable energy park spread over 538 square kilometers (roughly five times the size of Paris).

Adani group has not just laid solar panels that will convert sun rays into electricity and wind mills to harness wind blowing at the speed of 8 meters per second, but also built colonies for workers, put up desalination plants to make saline water pumped out of 700 meters below ground portable and utilities such as mobile phone repair shops.

The area also has its own set of challenges, heavy dust storms during March to June, no communication and transport infrastructure. Executives said while some workers are from Khavda village, accommodations are being built to house 8,000 workers.

Khavda at its peak will generate 81 billion units that can power entire nations such as Belgium, Chile and Switzerland. Executives said over the last five years, Adani Green conducted geotechnical investigations, seismic studies, a centrifuge study by Cambridge, resource assessment and land studies, Environment and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA), Environmental and Social Due Diligence (ESDD), and a detailed feasibility study, amongst several others, before embarking on the development of this site.

Construction started in 2022. The comprehensive infrastructure development effort included the construction of 100 km roads, 50 km of drainage, establishment of desalination and 3 reverse osmosis (RO) plants with a total capacity of 70 cubic meters per hour to meet the drinking water requirements of the project staff.

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