Solarium Green Energy Limited has been included in the Approved List of Models and Manufacturers (ALMM) for solar PV modules by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), the company informed BSE Limited in a regulatory filing.
According to the disclosure made under Regulation 30 of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2015, the company’s solar PV module manufacturing facility at Village Miroli in Daskroi, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, has been enlisted with an approved manufacturing capacity of 1.23 GW per annum. The company said the enlistment was made as per the ALMM list published by MNRE.
The approval covers various models of the company’s Bifacial P-Type Mono c-Si PERC Modules and Bifacial N-Type TOPCon Modules, the filing stated.
Ankit Garg, Chairman and Managing Director of Solarium Green Energy, said the inclusion in the ALMM marked a significant milestone for the company’s manufacturing business.
An accompanying office memorandum issued by the MNRE’s Grid Solar Power Division showed that the ministry had updated List-I of Manufacturers and Models of Solar PV Modules under the ALMM Order, 2019, in its latest revision. The memorandum noted that only those solar PV module models complying with Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) norms and meeting minimum module efficiency requirements are considered for enlistment under the list, with thresholds varying by category of application, such as utility-scale power plants, rooftop and solar pumping, and off-grid uses.
The MNRE order also stated that ALMM enlistment remains valid only as long as the manufacturer holds a valid BIS registration, failing which the listing would be deemed delisted. Enlisted companies are required to maintain updated BIS certification details, including validity and models covered, which can be verified through the BIS website, the order added.
Along with Solarium Green Energy, the updated list also reflected additions and capacity expansions for other manufacturers, indicating continued expansion of domestic solar module manufacturing capacity under the government’s ALMM framework aimed at promoting indigenous production.













