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Oneindig Technologies

Oneindig Technologies Powers India’s Toughest Solar

Why Oneindig Technologies Gets Called for the Hard Government Projects

15MW Ground Mounted in Leh, 13MW floating solar plant in Telangana, covering mountains in Himanchal Pradesh, school Rooftops in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. These aren’t easy projects. Here’s how the company keeps doing them.

INDIA — Government solar projects in India tend to be the ones MSMEs rarely want to touch. Remote locations, difficult terrain, strict timelines, procurement processes that leave no room for error. When they go wrong, it’s public. When they go right, it’s because someone did a lot of unglamorous work correctly.

Oneindig Technologies has been doing that work for years. The company has completed large-scale installations in some of the most logistically demanding environments in the country — and has built a reputation, project by project, as the team governments actually trust to deliver.

The Projects That Define the Track Record

Three projects in particular say a lot about where Oneindig operates and what it can handle:

In Leh, the Company is implementing a 15MW ground mounted installation at altitude — a region where weather, access, and construction windows are all working against you. In Telangana, it is received a Letter of Intent for a 13 MW floating solar plant on a Thermal Power Plant cooling reservoir, a technically specialized format that requires a different kind of engineering precision. And in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, it is putting solar power into the schools and their curriculum, serving communities that are genuinely off the mainland grid.

These aren’t projects you win on price. You win them because someone trusts you to manage complexity and still deliver.

What Government Clients Actually Need

Government projects have a different set of requirements than commercial ones. Timelines are fixed. Quality standards are documented and audited. There’s usually a committee involved at every stage. And the consequences of underperformance — for the client and for the vendor — are real.

Oneindig is set up for exactly this. The engineering teams are experienced across a wide range of installation types. The components used are high quality and well-sourced. And the company has enough project history across different geographies and scales to know what can go wrong and plan for it.

The Full Product Range

Part of why government clients keep coming back is that Oneindig can handle most of what a project needs in-house. The Company’s product portfolio covers:

  • Solar mounting structures built for durability across varied terrain
  • Off-grid systems for remote and island locations
  • On-grid and hybrid inverters
  • Solar batteries and lithium-based storage
  • Solar Surface/Submersible AC/DC pumps and controllers for agricultural and industrial use

Having this range under one roof matters. It reduces the coordination overhead for clients and means Oneindig owns the outcome, rather than pointing fingers between vendors when something doesn’t work.

Solar Pumps and the Agricultural Connection

A significant part of Oneindig’s government work involves the agricultural sector. India’s PM-KUSUM B Scheme which supports farmers in adopting solar-powered pumps and off-grid solar plants — has created a large and growing market for reliable solar irrigation solutions.

The case for solar pumps in farming is straightforward. Electricity supply is inconsistent in many rural areas. Diesel is expensive and requires ongoing procurement. A well-installed solar pump with a good controller runs on its own, with minimal maintenance, and the farmer knows their water supply is there when they need it.

Oneindig has delivered these systems across a range of agricultural environments. The goal has always been the same: something the farmer can depend on, not just something that was installed.

The Policy Environment Helps — But Execution Is Still the Job

India’s national solar policy has moved significantly in the right direction. Rooftop subsidies, the National Solar Mission, Make in India manufacturing incentives — all of this creates genuine market opportunity for companies that can deliver.

But policy creates opportunity, not outcomes. The outcomes come from turning up on site, solving problems, and getting the installation right. That’s been Oneindig’s focus, and it’s what the company’s government clients are paying for.

“We go where the project is, we want to keep challenge ourselves. We pick the hardest projects so people can look at them and wonder “How did they put up Solar here?”. We want to broadcast the message that Indian engineering still is world-class.

— Shikhar Agrawal, Chief Technology Officer, Oneindig Technologies Limited

About Oneindig Technologies

Oneindig Technologies is a solar energy company operating across residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural, and government segments in India. Its portfolio includes solar installations, energy storage, mounting structures, and solar-powered irrigation systems. The company has completed large-scale projects in some of India’s most challenging geographies.

Media Contact

Oneindig Technologies Limited
Website: https://oneindig.tech/

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