PIXON Secures ALMM Approval for Two Point Three Nine One GW Capacity

PIXON has secured approval under the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy's Approved List of Models and Manufacturers for a total manufacturing capacity of two point three nine one gigawatt (GW) of solar modules. The listing marks a notable milestone in the company's expansion within India's renewable energy manufacturing sector and underlines its move into higher efficiency technologies. The approval is expected to bolster domestic supply for larger projects and strengthen quality assurance across the supply chain.

The ALMM listing covers one point six four six gigawatt (GW) of TOPCon module capacity in advanced M10R and G12R formats together with 745 megawatt (MW) of Mono PERC module capacity. This mix positions PIXON to meet demand from utility scale and large commercial developers seeking next generation module solutions. The TOPCon capacity in particular aligns the company with the sector's transition towards higher efficiency cell architectures.

PIXON has increased its manufacturing footprint rapidly since its 2019 founding, having expanded capacity to one point six gigawatt (GW) from an initial 400 megawatt (MW) line and establishing one gigawatt (GW) production elsewhere to diversify output. Company leadership described the ALMM approval as a validation of its manufacturing quality, technology focus and long term commitment to India's clean energy objectives. The move is intended to support domestic deployment and reduce reliance on imports for critical module volumes.

The ALMM framework administered by the ministry serves as the benchmark for approved solar PV module models and manufacturers, with List I covering modules and List II covering cells to enhance reliability across the domestic solar supply chain. With the approval PIXON further consolidates its role as a growing manufacturer aligned with national self-reliance and clean energy targets. The development is likely to be watched by project developers and policy observers as domestic manufacturing scales up.

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