KKR-Backed Serentica Expands Green Power Push in India

Serentica targets up to $8B funding to scale clean power and strengthen India’s renewable portfolio by 2030.

By SE Online Bureau · November 28, 2025 · 6 min(s) read
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KKR-Backed Serentica Expands Green Power Push in India

Serentica Renewables, a KKR backed Serentica platform at the centre of India green energy expansion, has unveiled an ambitious plan to raise between$ 6 billion and$ 8 billion over the coming five times as it seeks to  fleetly gauge  its clean power operations across the country. This major renewable energy investment drive is aimed at  further than doubling the company’s current capacity and  situating it as a leading force in India’s evolving power  geography. The backing  trouble is part of a broader strategy to reach a 17- gigawatt clean energy portfolio by 2029/30, reflecting growing confidence in India power transmission upgrades and the long- term demand outlook for sustainable electricity. 

The capital  rise will support a  blend of accessions and new  design developments, as Serentica looks to capitalise on arising  openings created by a  surge of asset deals in India’s renewable sector. According to  president Pratik Agarwal, the company is taking a careful, value- grounded approach to accessions,  fastening on operating and near- completion  means that can  give steady generation while also strengthening its overall portfolio. This strategy underlines how the renewable energy investment  terrain in India is  growing, with investors decreasingly favouring scale, stability, and predictable returns. 

Serentica  presently operates around 2 GW of installed wind and solar capacity, with another 2 GW anticipated to come  functional within the coming ten months. This expansion signals a sharp acceleration from its  living base and highlights the pace at which the company is moving to meet its long- term targets. The planned$ 6 – 8 billion  rise forms part of a wider$ 10 – 11 billion investment programme extending through the end of the decade, encompassing both generation capacity and strategic accessions that align with India’s clean energy transition  pretensions. 

Agarwal has indicated that the first phase of this backing plan, amounting to roughly$ 3 billion, is  formerly completely secured,  icing a solid foundation for the coming stage of growth. The following tranche of$ 2 billion is  incompletely backed, with ongoing  conversations anticipated to close the remaining commitments in the near term. This phased approach reflects broader backing trends in India’s renewable  request, where global private equity  enterprises, autonomous wealth  finances, and large commercial investors are playing an decreasingly prominent  part in reshaping the sector’s structure and power patterns. 

India’s  public policy targets remain a  important  motorist of these developments. The government has set an  ideal to doublenon-fossil electricity capacity to 500 GW by 2030, a  thing that requires both  rapid-fire  design commissioning and  connection among  inventors. This  terrain has created a pool of 3 – 5 GW of operating and under- construction  means that are now available for accession, allowing companies like Serentica to gauge   snappily through a combination of organic growth and strategic asset purchases. The vacuity of  similar  means also reflects a  request in transition, where  inventors are reassessing portfolios and optimising capital allocation. 

resemblant to Serentica’s generation expansion, its family company Resonia is  fastening on strengthening the country’s transmission  structure, a critical  element of India’s energy transition. Formed after the break- up of Sterlite Power and backed by Singapore’s autonomous wealth fund GIC, Resonia plans to invest between$ 1.5 billion and$ 2.5 billion annually to accelerate grid development. The company aims to secure$ 2 – 3 billion in transmission  systems each time, aligning with  prospects that India will award$ 14 – 16 billion worth of transmission tenders in the coming period. 

The emphasis on transmission highlights a growing recognition that grid capacity and  trustability are among the largest challenges facing India’s renewable expansion. As  further wind and solar  systems come online in remote regions, the need to efficiently transport power to demand centres becomes decreasingly critical. Strengthening power corridors, expanding interstate connectivity, and modernising grid  structure are essential to minimise curtailment  pitfalls and ameliorate the overall bankability of renewable  systems. For investors, this creates a  resemblant  occasion in regulated, long- tenor  means that offer  fairly stable returns. 

Serentica’s strategy also underscores a shift in how large  inventors are approaching the  request. There’s a clear move towards  erecting diversified portfolios that balance different technologies and  topographies while securing long- term power purchase agreements with artificial and  marketable  guests. Rising demand for clean power from commercial buyers seeking to meet their own sustainability targets is  farther  buttressing this trend, encouraging  inventors to prioritise  trustability, scale, and long- term visibility. 

On a broader  position, Serentica’s planned fundraising and Resonia’s transmission investments illustrate the scale of capital now  needed to support India’s energy transition. As one of the world’s largest energy consumers, India’s success in executing both generation and grid  figure-  eschewal will have significant counteraccusations  for global emigrations and climate  pretensions. The country’s  trouble to combine policy clarity,  structure development, and private capital mobilisation is  situating it as a  crucial destination for clean energy investment in arising  requests. 

Whether this  instigation can be sustained will depend on  harmonious policy support, effective permitting processes, and  flexible global capital flows.However, Serentica’s expansion and the  resemblant strengthening of India’s transmission network could play a decisive  part in shaping a more sustainable and  flexible power system for the nation, while  buttressing its standing in the global clean energy  geography, If these conditions remain favourable.

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