

Aroma Solar Energy has commissioned a solar PV module production facility in Karnal, Haryana, with an annual capacity of 1.2 GW
The plant manufactures TOPCon modules rated between 620 W and 635 W, with an efficiency of up to 23.51%
The company says the fully automated, AI-driven facility uses robotic processes to ensure consistent module quality
Aroma Solar Energy has commissioned a solar PV module production facility with a capacity of 1.2 GW in India’s Haryana. The company is the renewable energy arm of Aroma Agrotech, an agricultural exporter.
The 1.2 GW factory in Karnal uses TOPCon solar PV technology. Modules produced at this facility are rated for a power output of 620 W to 635 W, with 23.51% efficiency, according to the manufacturer.
Aroma Solar CEO Mayank Garg said that the Karnal factory is North India’s 1st fully automated, AI-driven production line with process precision, centered around module consistency. The manufacturing equipment was procured from a Chinese supplier, and the company says it is sourcing tier-I raw materials.
These modules will cater to the large-scale solar project space in India, according to the company.
Robotic automation ensures uniform quality of the modules, including cell placement and lamination. “Every stage from cell placement to lamination is engineered to reduce variability and enhance reliability across the lifecycle of the module,” stated Garg.
The company said it is already planning capacity expansion, including venturing further upstream with solar cell and wafer manufacturing; however, it has not shared any details. Several Indian manufacturers are expanding their vertical integration to cell and wafer production as the government brings in the Approved List for Models and Manufacturers (ALMM) for cell and wafer capacity (see India To Enforce ALMM List-III For Ingots, Wafers On June 1, 2028).