ArcelorMittal S.A.MT is making a substantial bet on clean power infrastructure, revealing a trio of large-scale solar and wind initiatives across India that will fundamentally transform the steelmaker’s regional energy footprint. These three installations represent a critical component of the company’s broader decarbonization strategy, positioned to double India’s renewable generation capacity from its current levels while advancing MT’s global clean energy portfolio to 3.3 GW.
The energy transformation spans three strategic locations: Maharashtra’s Amaravati region will host a 36 MW solar facility, Rajasthan’s Bikaner will house the flagship installation with 400 MW of solar plus 500 MW battery storage, and Gujarat’s Bachau site will combine 250 MW wind with 300 MW solar generation and 300 MWh integrated battery systems. Collectively, these initiatives will cost approximately $0.9 billion and are engineered to supply power exclusively to AMNS India, the company’s steelmaking joint venture with Nippon Steel held at a 60/40 ownership split.
The climate impact proves substantial. The Amaravati plant will deliver 0.04 million tons of annual CO2 reductions, while the larger Bikaner facility will eliminate 0.65 million tons yearly. The Bachau complex tops this at 0.9 million tons of annual CO2 savings. Construction timelines show Amaravati reaching completion in H1 2027, with both Bikaner and Bachau operational by H1 2028.
When combined with MT’s existing 1 GW Indian renewable portfolio and a parallel AMNS India-developed facility comparable to the Bachau installation, these additions will generate 4 million tons in total annual CO2 reduction. The collective power output will satisfy approximately 35% of the electricity demand for AMNS India’s steelmaking operations at Hazira. This mirrors MT’s approach in South America, where similar clean energy partnerships operate across Brazil and Argentina.
Operationally, the three-nation portfolio of Indian, Brazilian, and Argentinian facilities collectively generates 3.3 GW of electrical capacity upon full commissioning. Over the trailing 12 months, MT’s stock performance has appreciated 94.5%, demonstrating market confidence in the company’s strategic energy investments and operational execution within the basic materials sector.
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ArcelorMittal's Major Push Into India's Renewable Energy Market
ArcelorMittal S.A. MT is making a substantial bet on clean power infrastructure, revealing a trio of large-scale solar and wind initiatives across India that will fundamentally transform the steelmaker’s regional energy footprint. These three installations represent a critical component of the company’s broader decarbonization strategy, positioned to double India’s renewable generation capacity from its current levels while advancing MT’s global clean energy portfolio to 3.3 GW.
The energy transformation spans three strategic locations: Maharashtra’s Amaravati region will host a 36 MW solar facility, Rajasthan’s Bikaner will house the flagship installation with 400 MW of solar plus 500 MW battery storage, and Gujarat’s Bachau site will combine 250 MW wind with 300 MW solar generation and 300 MWh integrated battery systems. Collectively, these initiatives will cost approximately $0.9 billion and are engineered to supply power exclusively to AMNS India, the company’s steelmaking joint venture with Nippon Steel held at a 60/40 ownership split.
The climate impact proves substantial. The Amaravati plant will deliver 0.04 million tons of annual CO2 reductions, while the larger Bikaner facility will eliminate 0.65 million tons yearly. The Bachau complex tops this at 0.9 million tons of annual CO2 savings. Construction timelines show Amaravati reaching completion in H1 2027, with both Bikaner and Bachau operational by H1 2028.
When combined with MT’s existing 1 GW Indian renewable portfolio and a parallel AMNS India-developed facility comparable to the Bachau installation, these additions will generate 4 million tons in total annual CO2 reduction. The collective power output will satisfy approximately 35% of the electricity demand for AMNS India’s steelmaking operations at Hazira. This mirrors MT’s approach in South America, where similar clean energy partnerships operate across Brazil and Argentina.
Operationally, the three-nation portfolio of Indian, Brazilian, and Argentinian facilities collectively generates 3.3 GW of electrical capacity upon full commissioning. Over the trailing 12 months, MT’s stock performance has appreciated 94.5%, demonstrating market confidence in the company’s strategic energy investments and operational execution within the basic materials sector.