Windergy India 2025 : India’s only trade fair and conference dedicated to the wind energy turn seven this year, as Chennai prepares to host Windergy India 2025 from October 29–31 at the Chennai Trade Centre, with more than 20 countries participating and over 15,000 people expected to attend as visitors.
Windergy India 2025 is organised by the Indian Wind Turbine Manufacturers Association (IWTMA) and PDA Ventures Pvt. Ltd., with support from the Ministry of Power, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), NITI Aayog, and industry bodies such as India Energy Storage Alliance (IESA), Indian Wind Power Association (IWPA), International Solar Alliance (ISA), Skill Council for Green Jobs (SCGJ), Wind Independent Power Producer Association (WIPPA) Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI), Composites Excellence Centre of Asia (CECA), National Institute of Wind Energy (NIWE), Hydraulics Trailer Owners Association (HTOA), Danish Wind Export, Embassy of Spain, Indo German Energy Forum, Net-Zero Energy Transition Association (NETRA), Invest India and Indo-German Chamber of Commerce.
The Karnataka Renewable Energy Development Limited (KREDL) joins as the partner state, highlighting Karnataka’sleadership and commitment to wind energy innovation.
Speaking about localisation, Mr. RPV Prasad, Managing Director, Envision Energy India said, “The wind sector contributes 23 % of total RE installed capacity of India, and is rapidly localising with 65–70% of turbine components now produced domestically—mainly Towers, Blades, Generator and Gearbox. As per the recent mandate issued by MNRE and with strong policy support and scaling installations, the localisation is expected to rise to 85% by 2027. This progress reflects India’s Viksit Bharat and Atmanirbhar Bharat vision, strengthened by government initiatives such as ALMM (Wind) policy, and the annual tendering of 10 GW. Windergy India 2025 is an essential platform to unite policymakers, industry leaders, and technology partners to collectively realise the vision of achieving 100 GW of wind capacity by 2030 and advancing toward a net-zero future.”