Adani Praises Vishakha's Solar Ecosystem as New Model for Indian Manufacturing

Gautam Adani hailed the Vishakha Group's coordinated industrial ecosystem as a new model for Indian manufacturing. He highlighted the rapid commissioning of India's largest solar glass furnace as setting a global benchmark. Adani recounted how a 35-year partnership with Jigish Doshi was founded on trust during a crisis, not just contracts. He emphasized that this integration of glass, aluminium, and films creates a unique 12-gigawatt solar manufacturing ecosystem.

Key Points: Gautam Adani on Vishakha Group's Manufacturing Ecosystem

  • Integrated solar manufacturing ecosystem
  • World's largest solar glass furnace in India
  • Built on 35-year partnership of trust
  • Model for renewable energy future
  • Focus on principles over profit
3 min read

Gautam Adani says Vishakha Group's coordinated industrial ecosystem represents new model of Indian manufacturing

Gautam Adani highlights Vishakha Group's integrated solar glass and aluminium complex as a new benchmark for Indian manufacturing and renewable energy.

"This was not an Indian timeline trying to catch up with global standards. It was an Indian benchmark setting a global benchmark. - Gautam Adani"

Gandhinagar, January 17

Adani Group Chairman Gautam Adani on Saturday said that Vishakha Group's coordinated industrial ecosystem spanning solar glass, aluminium, polymer films and advanced materials represents a new model of Indian manufacturing capable of strengthening the country's renewable energy future while setting international benchmarks.

Speaking on the 25-year journey of Vishakha Group, he stressed that the success was not the result of legal agreements alone, but of shared conscience and mutual respect.

He also acknowledged broader contributions of Jigish Doshi, Chairman, Vishakha Group, to the society, including leadership roles in community and charitable organisations.

Adani pointed to the commissioning of India's largest solar glass furnace, a 660-tonne-per-day facility, completed within just 24 months, as evidence of this shift.

"This was not an Indian timeline trying to catch up with global standards. It was an Indian benchmark setting a global benchmark," he said.

Adani added that the upcoming second phase would scale capacity to 1,260 tonnes per day, making it the largest solar glass furnace ever built in India, with an ambitious execution target of 20 months.

He further highlighted one of the country's largest integrated aluminium complexes at Vishakha Group, anchored by India's largest fully automated anodizing line.

"What makes the enterprise distinctive is not any single asset, but the integration of glass, aluminium and films into a single, 12-gigawatt solar manufacturing ecosystem an industrial configuration he described as unique globally," he mentioned.

Addressing the next generation of leaders, he urged them to look beyond balance sheets and safeguard the trust and family integrity that made growth possible.

Referring to the period during the Gulf War, when India faced severe import disruptions and factories were close to shutting down, he said many traders saw the shortage as a profit opportunity.

"....Unfortunately, in that challenging period, many traders saw the shortage as an opportunity to profit. Contracts were broken, prices skyrocketed, and what should have been a crisis to address collaboratively transformed into an opportunity to exploit. It was in this situation that I first met Jigish, who had come to see me and had brought along many of his small customers. He had not come to complain, to ask for favours, to negotiate a better deal. He had come so I could truly understand the pain of those customers affected by this crisis..." he said.

"While the temptations of profits made others focus on themselves, Jigish was focused on his customers, his principles and the promises he had made. So, I made a simple decision. Instead of forcing Jigish through layers of distributors who made their cuts, we decided to supply to him directly. We extended him credit; we placed our trust in him. I did so because I realised that Jigish had come not to ask any favours, he was asking me for fairness..." he added.

Adani said that the moment of trust became the foundation of a 35-year partnership that later grew into multiple world-class manufacturing businesses.

"Vishakha was not built by contracts. It was built by conviction. In a world obsessed with smart deals, this was a reminder that character revealed in crisis is the most valuable capital of all," he said.

"For Jigish and me, Vishakha is a living proof of how faith and friendship can shape a future where trust becomes the most valuable form of capital. It is a reminder of profound impact in guiding the incredible journey of Vishakha," he added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
The part about trust and character over contracts is so true, especially in business. In our culture, a person's word (vachan) used to mean everything. Good to see that value highlighted by such leaders.
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Aman W
Impressive scale and ambition. A 12-gigawatt integrated ecosystem is massive for solar manufacturing. Hope this model is replicated across other sectors to make India truly self-reliant (Aatmanirbhar).
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Sarah B
While the partnership story is heartwarming, I hope this "new model" also prioritizes sustainable practices and fair wages for all workers. Large industrial complexes must lead in social responsibility too.
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Karthik V
The Gulf War anecdote is a classic lesson in business ethics. When others were looking for quick money, they focused on principles. That's the real foundation of a durable company. More MBAs should study this.
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Nidhi U
Amazing! Solar glass, aluminium, polymers - all integrated. This is how we build resilience and reduce import dependence. Hope the success trickles down to MSMEs and creates more ancillary units and jobs.

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