On the windswept plains of central India, something steady is taking shape. Steel towers rise from red earth, rotors turn against open skies, and the numbers tell a story that deserves more than a footnote in India's clean energy conversation: 17+ gigawatts delivered, over a hundred completed projects, and perhaps most tellingly, a Total Recordable Incident Rate of zero through 2024 and into 2025.
That last figure belongs to Sangreen Future Renewables Private Limited (SFRPL), a Pune-headquartered wind EPC company that has spent the past several years doing one of the hardest things in renewable energy: consistently executing large, complex projects on time, within budget, and without a single recordable safety incident.
India's ambition is well-documented. The country has committed to 500 GW of non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030, with wind energy forming a substantial pillar of that target. Turning that ambition into actual spinning turbines requires companies that can handle every stage: site identification, land acquisition, civil foundations, mechanical installation, electrical evacuation, and the complex logistics of moving turbine components that can stretch over 60 metres in length across rural terrain. That is the business Sangreen is in, and the scale at which it now operates makes it one of India's most significant, if understated, players in this transition.
Three Decades of Industrial DNA
Sangreen Future Renewables Private Limited is a wholly owned subsidiary of Sanghvi Movers Limited, the world's fifth largest and Asia's largest crane rental company. This is not merely a corporate footnote. It is the single most important thing to understand about how Sangreen is built.
Sanghvi Movers has operated across India's heaviest industrial sectors for over three decades. Moving massive loads across power plants, refineries, and steel facilities demands precision, logistics sophistication, and a zero-compromise approach to safety. Sangreen is the extension of that capability into wind energy, carrying the same machinery, the same trained workforce, and the same operational rigour that built its parent organisation's reputation.
The numbers that come with this inheritance are significant. Sangreen currently operates with:
450+ cranes in its fleet
200+ trailers and axle lines
10+ strategically located storage yards
100+ clients served across India 2+ GW currently in the order book 5 GW in the enquiry pipeline
It is a company with the physical assets and institutional knowledge to handle projects of significant complexity and a clear runway for growth.
What Sangreen Actually Does
End-to-End.
The phrase 'end-to-end' is used loosely in many industries. For Sangreen, it means exactly what it says. The company's service scope covers the complete lifecycle of a wind energy project, from the first soil test to the moment power flows into the grid.
Civil BoP
Before a single turbine section can be erected, the ground must be prepared. Sangreen's civil engineering teams handle the full range of pre-construction and construction work that makes a project site viable:
Site identification, wind resource assessment (WRA), and micro-siting to optimise turbine placement
Land acquisition, right-of-way management, and all statutory approvals and permits
Access road development, GPS-based centre point marking, and excavation works
Foundation construction - anchor cage preparation, raft and pedestal concreting, grouting, and compaction
Crane pad construction, which requires careful soil strengthening and plate load testing
Storage yard development with 24/7 security, fencing, and emergency response teams
To date, Sangreen's civil teams have constructed over 300 turbine foundations and an equal number of crane pads and hardstands across project sites nationwide.
Mechanical BoP
This is the work most associated with wind energy in the public imagination: the actual lifting and assembly of turbine towers, nacelles, hubs, and blades. It is also where Sangreen's crane heritage becomes most directly relevant. The company deploys heavy-lift cranes and specialised rigging solutions to manage tower erection, blade attachment, generator alignment, and the installation of auxiliary structures. With 17+ GW of
mechanical capacity delivered, Sangreen's field teams have handled more turbine assemblies than many companies see in a generation.
The company successfully executed the Envision 5 MW / WTG 5.x MW; one of the most advanced and high-capacity turbine systems currently deployed in India.
Electrical BoP
Generating power is only useful if it can reach the grid. Sangreen's electrical teams handle:
Substation design, construction, installation, and commissioning
SCADA integration for remote monitoring and management of turbine operations
Underground and overhead cable laying - covering high-voltage, medium-voltage, and low-voltage networks
Cable termination, jointing, earthing, and lightning protection systems
Internal wiring and full pre-commissioning and testing of Wind Turbine Generators
Sangreen has completed over 110 km of 33kV electrical transmission lines: infrastructure that moves generated wind power toward the national grid.
Safety, Quality, And The Environment
A Zero-Incident Record Is Not an Accident
Wind energy construction is genuinely dangerous work. Personnel operate at tower heights of 100 metres or more, handle components weighing hundreds of tonnes, and manage high-voltage electrical systems in remote locations. The industry's safety standards are high, and Sangreen's record sits at the top of them.
The company's Total Recordable Incident Rate stands at zero for both 2024 and 2025 to date. This is not a marketing claim; it is a measurable output of a management system that treats safety as an operational requirement, not a compliance checkbox.
Sangreen holds a triple certification under its Integrated Management System, certified by TÜV NORD:
ISO 9001:2015 - Quality Management System
ISO 14001:2015 - Environmental Management System
ISO 45001:2018 - Occupational Health & Safety Management System
Beyond certification, 100% of the company's workforce receives safety training. All field personnel complete GWO (Global Wind Organisation) training, the internationally recognised standard for wind turbine operations. The GWO programme covers working at heights, first aid, manual handling, fire safety, and emergency response in turbine environments.
The Road Ahead
ELEVATE 2030: Building the Next Chapter
Sangreen has articulated its forward strategy under the banner of ELEVATE 2030: a growth framework built around 6 pillars: global expansion, a people-first culture, a customer-centric approach, robust financial growth, a scalable digital framework, and product portfolio diversification.
With 2+ GW in the current order book and 5+ GW in the enquiry pipeline, the commercial momentum behind this strategy is real. India's wind energy sector is at an inflection point: the country is moving rapidly toward larger turbines, more complex project environments, and an increasing push for domestic manufacturing and execution capability. Sangreen's investment in next-generation turbine readiness, including full training on the Envision 5 MW platform, suggests a company that is positioning for that transition rather than waiting for it to arrive.
The ELEVATE 2030 plan also signals global ambition. India's wind EPC expertise, built over years of executing in challenging terrain and under difficult regulatory conditions, is increasingly transferable to markets across South and Southeast Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. Companies like Sangreen, which combine execution depth with institutional credibility, are well-placed to move beyond domestic borders as global wind capacity investment accelerates.
India's renewable energy story is large enough to hold many protagonists: policy architects, financiers, turbine manufacturers, and grid operators. But at its core, the transition depends on companies that actually go to the site, prepare the ground, lift the blades, and energise the grid.
Sangreen Future Renewables Private Limited has delivered 17+ gigawatts of wind capacity across over 100 projects and served more than 100 clients, including some of the world's most demanding energy companies.
In the story of India's green energy future, Sangreen is not a footnote. It is one of the people actually writing it.

















