In April 2012 C.E., a stretch of semi-arid land in Patan district, Gujarat, became home to one of the most ambitious solar energy projects on the planet. At inauguration, the Charanka Solar Park — also known as Gujarat Solar Park-1 — ranked as the world’s third-largest photovoltaic power station, signaling that a rapidly developing nation could leap toward clean energy at industrial scale.
Key findings
- Gujarat Solar Park: Inaugurated in April 2012 C.E. by then Chief Minister Narendra Modi, the park initially commissioned 214 megawatts of solar capacity across 2,000 hectares in Patan district, Gujarat.
- Solar capacity growth: From roughly 250 MW at launch, installed capacity grew to approximately 730 MW by March 2022 C.E., commissioned by 36 independent developers — demonstrating a replicable multi-developer model for large-scale renewable energy.
- Photovoltaic investment: By 2018 C.E., the park had attracted investment of approximately Rs 5,365 crore and generated 3,441 million units of electricity, with further expansion of up to 790 MW under consideration.
What made Charanka possible
Gujarat had already established itself as an early mover in India’s renewable energy transition. The state government, under the Gujarat Power Corporation Limited (GPCL), developed a multi-developer model that allowed up to 36 separate private companies to build and operate plants within the shared park infrastructure. This approach — pooling land, grid connection, and administrative overhead while letting competition drive down costs — would become a template replicated across India and beyond.
The national solar policy at the time set fixed tariffs of Rs 17 per kilowatt-hour for photovoltaic systems for 25 years, creating the financial certainty investors needed. Projects completing before January 28, 2012 C.E. were eligible for the higher rate. That deadline helped accelerate around 600 MW of capacity into commission ahead of schedule — a rare instance of a policy incentive producing exactly the urgency it was designed to create.
India’s solar ambitions were not emerging in a vacuum. By the early 2010s C.E., China had demonstrated that manufacturing scale could drive down panel costs dramatically. Germany’s feed-in tariff experiments had shown that policy design mattered as much as technology. Charanka drew on both lessons while adapting them to India’s particular land availability and grid infrastructure challenges.
A signal for the developing world
The timing mattered beyond India’s borders. In 2012 C.E., solar power was still widely regarded as expensive and marginal — a technology for rooftops and off-grid applications, not baseload power at scale. Charanka’s early commissioning challenged that assumption directly.
For other nations in the Global South watching India, the message was significant: a country of 1.2 billion people, with substantial energy poverty and a coal-dependent grid, could mobilize private capital and public infrastructure to build utility-scale solar in a matter of years. The park’s third-place global ranking at the time of inauguration placed India alongside the most advanced solar economies on Earth.
The wind power component — two 2.1 MW turbines generating 4.2 MW — was modest, but it hinted at the hybrid energy thinking that would define India’s renewable buildout in the years to come.
Lasting impact
Charanka’s legacy is visible in the scale of what followed. India launched the National Solar Mission in 2010 C.E. and subsequently set targets that would have seemed fantastical in 2012 C.E. — 100 gigawatts by 2022 C.E., and ambitions of 500 GW of non-fossil capacity by 2030 C.E. The multi-developer solar park model pioneered at Charanka was formally codified in India’s Solar Park Scheme from 2014 C.E. onward, seeding dozens of parks across Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and beyond.
The park also demonstrated that solar generation costs could fall steeply with scale and competition. The tariffs negotiated at Charanka in 2012 C.E. look expensive compared to the record-low bids — under Rs 2 per kWh — that Indian solar auctions would produce by the late 2010s C.E. That compression happened in part because projects like Charanka proved the market was real.
Globally, India’s early commitment to utility-scale solar helped shift the international conversation about which countries were serious about the energy transition. The International Renewable Energy Agency has since cited India as one of the world’s leading examples of large-scale renewable deployment in an emerging economy.
Blindspots and limits
The Charanka Solar Park was built on traditional migration routes of a semi-nomadic shepherd community, and the government did not consult them before construction began. Of the 1,000 local jobs promised, only around 60 locals were employed, and many lost access to grazing lands that had sustained their livelihoods. Promised infrastructure — schools, drinking water, energy access — reportedly went undelivered.
These failures are not incidental. They reflect a recurring tension in large-scale renewable energy development globally: the communities living closest to the land often bear the disruption while receiving the least of the benefit. India’s solar expansion since 2012 C.E. has not consistently resolved that tension, and international bodies including the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights have flagged land rights and displacement as systemic concerns in the clean energy transition.
The park’s output growth has also been slower than early projections. Reaching 730 MW by 2022 C.E. — a full decade after inauguration — reflects the practical difficulties of coordinating dozens of developers, managing grid integration, and sustaining policy support across changing political cycles.
What Charanka still represents
Even with those limits fully in view, Charanka remains a milestone worth studying. It showed that solar at scale was possible in the developing world before most analysts believed it was. It tested a financing and governance model that has since been replicated widely. And it helped accelerate the global cost curves that have made solar the cheapest electricity source in history by some measures.
The park now sits within a country that has become one of the world’s top five solar markets. That trajectory did not begin at Charanka — but Charanka was among the moments that made it legible.
India’s solar story is still being written. New parks are being commissioned in deserts and on reservoirs. Government data shows solar now accounts for a growing share of India’s installed power capacity. The semi-arid land in Patan district was one of the first pages.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Gujarat Solar Park-1
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares recognized at COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on India
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