WattPower has partnered with Khare Energy to power a 4.5 MW agrivoltaics project in Madhya Pradesh that combines solar energy generation with commercial strawberry cultivation

WattPower Powers 4.5 MW Agrivoltaics Project In Madhya Pradesh

WattPower, one of India's leading solar inverter manufacturers, has supported Khare Energy to develop and execute an innovative agrivoltaics project at Adarsh Jeevan Farms in Madhya Pradesh, with its solar products and solutions. Establishing a practical model for maximising land productivity in India's evolving renewable energy sector, the project seamlessly integrates solar power production with commercial strawberry cultivation. WattPower served as the technology partner, powering the project with its high-performance string inverter solutions.

Spread across approximately 14 acres at Adarsh Jeevan Farms, the 4.5 MW solar project owned and developed by Khare Energy generates nearly 9,000–10,000 units of electricity daily. Powered by 7  WattPower 330KTL string inverters, the project showcases how reliable solar technology can support innovative agrivoltaics at scale. Building on its success, Khare Energy is now planning an additional 1 MW expansion, reinforcing confidence in the model's long-term viability and impact.

A key factor behind the project's performance is WattPower's 330KTL string inverters. Designed and developed in India, their multi-string architecture enhances system reliability, minimises downtime, and maximises long-term energy yield. Built to perform consistently even in harsh environmental conditions, the technology delivers dependable performance where many conventional inverters struggle.

The site has become known locally for something you wouldn't expect from a solar installation — strawberry picking. Visitors come for the fruit and leave having absorbed a bit about sustainable farming and clean energy along the way, which is a neat trick for what started out as a fairly conventional power project.

That's really the point of Adarsh Jeevan Farms: it's not just solar panels sitting on a plot of land. The same acreage is doing three jobs at once — generating power, growing a premium crop, and pulling in visitors who'd otherwise have no reason to think about either.

As India pushes harder on its clean energy transition, projects built this way could matter more than their size suggests. Squeezing multiple kinds of value out of the same land, giving rural livelihoods a second income stream, keeping development genuinely sustainable rather than just labelled that way — this is the kind of model worth replicating. Built on Khare Energy's execution on the ground and WattPower's string inverter technology, Adarsh Jeevan Farms looks less like a one-off and more like a template for where renewable energy in India could go next.

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