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SoftBank, China's GCL team up for $930 million Indian solar venture

SoftBank and GCL's new venture will eventually have a capacity of 4Gw and will be implemented in two 2Gw phases

solar energy, renewable energy
India needs to expand its current solar capacity sevenfold to reach the 100 gigawatts by 2022
Reuters Beijing
Last Updated : Apr 02 2018 | 3:52 PM IST
SoftBank Group Corp has agreed to launch a $930 million Indian joint solar energy venture with Chinese firm GCL System Integration Technology Co Ltd as part of its ambitious India solar investment roadmap.

The venture will work on photovoltaic technology, which is used in solar panels. GCL will provide technology and SoftBank will assist in obtaining land and regulatory approvals, GCL said in a filing to the Shenzhen stock exchange dated Friday.

SoftBank said in 2015 that it would invest up to $20 billion along with Foxconn Technology Co Ltd and Bharti Enterprises in solar projects in India, which has a goal of generating 100 gigawatts (GW) of power from solar by 2022.

SoftBank and GCL's new venture will eventually have a capacity of 4GW and will be implemented in two 2GW phases.

The Japanese firm will hold 60 per cent of the venture's shares and GCL will own 40 per cent.

Funding for the project will come from SoftBank's Vision Fund, which counts Apple Inc, Foxconn and Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund among its backers.

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As of last May, it had raised over $93 billion, making it the world's largest private equity fund.

The fund recently announced it would invest in building the world's largest solar power project in Saudi Arabia - a project expected to cost up to $200 billion and have a capacity to produce up to 200 GW by 2030.

GCL shares were up 4.7 per cent at 0357 GMT, after earlier rising almost 6 per cent to their highest since December.

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First Published: Apr 02 2018 | 3:52 PM IST

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