Haryana unveils a state-of-the-art 240-tonne-per-day biomass pellet plant in Rewari, converting crop stubble into clean fuel for thermal power. The facility targets pollution cuts, extra farmer income, and a boost for rural jobs—signaling a major leap toward sustainable energy and stubble-burning solutions.
Union Minister for New & Renewable Energy Pralhad Joshi inaugurated Haryana’s landmark 240-TPD biomass pellet plant in Rewari this week. The facility will process paddy straw, mustard straw, and cotton stalks—a regionally abundant crop residue—transforming farm waste into biomass pellets for co-firing with coal in thermal power plants. The initiative tackles rampant seasonal stubble burning and related air pollution, converting a persistent environmental challenge into valuable clean energy while supporting the government’s mandatory biomass co-firing policy for thermal plants.
This new plant improves local air quality and carbon emissions, stimulates economic opportunities for farmers via a buyback program, and strengthens job creation throughout rural Haryana. The state now backs more than 26 active waste-to-energy projects, and the plant reinforces Haryana’s accelerating transition towards green energy leadership.
Key Highlights:
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240-TPD biomass plant launched in Rewari, Haryana
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Converts paddy, mustard, and cotton crop waste into clean biomass fuel
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Reduces stubble burning, air pollution, and carbon footprint
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Supports government policy on biomass co-firing in thermal power stations
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Generates additional farmer income and rural jobs
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Haryana now operates 26 waste-to-energy facilities
Sources : Mercom India, KNN India, PIB Press Release, Adda247, BioEnergy Times.