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Solar and Wind Expansion Set to Trigger USD 10–15 Billion Land Investments by 2030: Colliers India

By Realtynmore 1h ago

New Delhi, May 20, 2026: India’s renewable energy landscape is poised for massive expansion, with solar and wind capacity additions set to unlock USD 10–15 billion in land investments by 2030, according to a report by Colliers India titled ‘The Green shift: Renewable prioritization reshaping Indian real estate’. Supported by strong policy pushes and a federal target to reach 500 GW of non-fossil-based capacity by 2030, the country’s real estate sector—specifically land, industrial, and warehousing segments—is emerging as a core beneficiary of this transition, Colliers India said in a press release.

As of 2025, India’s installed renewable energy capacity stood at 251 GW, with non-fossil sources accounting for 51% of the existing capacity mix. Solar leads the installed base at 135.5 GW (54%), followed by onshore wind at 54.5 GW (22%). An additional 146 GW of renewable projects are currently under construction. Looking ahead to 2030, Colliers projects an estimated 270–300 GW of new solar and wind capacity additions, requiring nearly 7 lakh acres of land and attracting USD 110–120 billion in overall investments. Because land aggregation and acquisition typically comprise 10–12% of total project costs, this green energy scale-up presents substantial real estate entry points for private developers, construction firms, and institutional investors.

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“India’s renewable energy capacity stands at 251 GW, and with another 270-300 GW of expected solar and wind energy additions by 2030, the sector is set to enter its next phase of accelerated growth. This scale-up will create significant opportunities for the real estate sector, particularly in land and industrial & warehousing segment. By 2030, solar and wind projects alone could require nearly 7 lakh acres of land, unlocking USD 10–15 billion of opportunity in land aggregation & acquisition. Most importantly, over the next few years, renewable energy will not only accelerate India’s decarbonization journey but also drive development of growth corridors and investment destinations, catalyzing long-term sustainable growth across the country.” says Badal Yagnik, CEO & Managing Director at Colliers India.

Simultaneously, manufacturing incentives and ultra-mega project developments are creating a surge in industrial and warehousing leasing by renewable energy Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs). Between 2021 and 2025, these OEMs recorded 6.1 million sq ft of Grade-A warehousing uptake across India’s top eight cities, with their share in overall industrial leasing climbing from 3% to 8%. Driven by the domestic production of solar PV modules, wind turbines, and battery storage solutions, annual OEM leasing is projected to hit 4–7 million sq ft by 2030, commanding 10–15% of India’s total industrial real estate demand.

Vimal Nadar, National Director & Head, Research, Colliers India.The economic impacts of this green expansion are expected to cascade into broader real estate segments. As manufacturing units and Operations & Maintenance (O&M) centers establish footprints in tier-II and tier-III cities, the growth will stimulate localized demand for office spaces, training facilities, affordable housing, rental accommodations, and

“Over the last five years, annual leasing by renewable energy OEMs has surged nearly 4X times to around 3 million sq ft of industrial & warehousing space uptake in 2025. Chennai and Pune have emerged as the preferred cities, cumulatively accounting for almost two-thirds of the space uptake since 2021. By 2030, annual Grade A space uptake by these OEMs is likely to reach 4-7 million sq ft, accounting for 10-15% of the overall industrial & warehousing demand. This growth will be driven by rapid scaling up of domestic component manufacturing of solar PV modules, wind turbines, geothermal heating & cooling systems, battery storage solutions, semiconductors and other renewable energy components.” says Vimal Nadar, National Director & Head, Research, Colliers India.

The economic impacts of this green expansion are expected to cascade into broader real estate segments. As manufacturing units and Operations & Maintenance (O&M) centers establish footprints in tier-II and tier-III cities, the growth will stimulate localized demand for office spaces, training facilities, affordable housing, rental accommodations, and integrated industrial townships, structurally altering the country’s regional commercial corridors.

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