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Venwind Refex to Supply 148 MW of Wind Turbines to Jindal Steel

The order will be executed by September 2026

December 19, 2025

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Chennai-based wind energy solutions company Venwind Refex Power (VRPL), a subsidiary of Refex Industries, has received an order to supply 148 MW of wind turbine generators to Jindal Steel and Power Group for wind projects in Tamil Nadu.

VRPL will design, procure, manufacture, assemble, and supply the wind turbines. It will also provide related technical and supervisory assistance.

The order will be executed by September 2026.

VRPL provides turnkey solutions for wind farm projects. The company’s products include its 5.3 MW GWH182 wind turbine generator. It has a turbine portfolio of over 128 GW of operational turbines across 38 countries.

The company holds an exclusive license with Germany-based wind turbine manufacturer, Vensys Energy, to manufacture the 5.3 MW wind turbines. Vensys has a portfolio of over 2.5 GW of operational capacity in India.

VRPL aims to reach an annual turbine capacity of 5 GW.

Last year, Refex Industries partnered with Winvision Enterprises to form a joint venture focused on wind energy solutions. The joint venture will operate through Refex Green Energy (RGEL), a subsidiary of Refex Industries, to provide wind energy solutions, including wind turbine generator manufacturing and assembly.

In October this year, the board of directors of Refex Green Power, a wholly-owned subsidiary company of Refex Renewables and Infrastructure, approved the sale of its entire 74% equity stake in Flaunt Solar Energy, a step-down subsidiary.

India added 1.4 GW of wind energy capacity in the third quarter (Q3) of 2025, a 105% year-over-year increase from 706.5 MW in Q3 2024, according to Mercom India Research. Capacity additions, however, fell 11% compared to Q2 2025. Limited manufacturing capacity and logistical bottlenecks constrained component availability, while reliance on imported parts, along with shipping delays and fluctuating costs, compounded execution challenges. These factors collectively slowed project completion despite ongoing efforts to accelerate installations.

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