With the costs increased for coal-based power, Tata Cleantech Capital may fund as much as Rs 2,500 crore ($401 million) on renewable and energy-efficiency projects in India. The combined cost of grid power and diesel generators that many companies use nowadays is higher than solar, the company reasoned for its move to fund renewable energy projects. The Tata Cleantech Capital has been set up jointly by Tata Capital and International Finance Corp.
FlashNews:
Officials Gear Up for Full Operationalisation of Western Dedicated Freight Corridor
Transition to Bioenergy Requires Cohesive Effort Across Entire Value Chain: Naik
Air India, Singapore Airlines Ink Cooperation Framework to Deepen Partnership
Manohar Lal Flags Off Countdown to Global Bharat Electricity Summit 2026 in March
Project Kaundinya: India, Oman Must Collaborate on Green Shipping Corridor, Says Sonowal
Project Kaundinya: OneWeb Connectivity Powers Indian Navy’s Historic INSV Kaundinya Voyage
Project Kaundinya: INSV Kaundinya Voyage Revives India‑Oman 5,000-Year-Old Maritime Legacy
CII Suggests Mandates and Incentives to Drive India’s Green Hydrogen Economy
India’s Construction Equipment Demand Falls 9%, Exports Surge Amid Revival Prospects
Coal and the Grid: Why India Still Needs Baseload Power
RVNL to Build 200-Wagon POH Workshop in Odisha Under ₹2.01 Billion EPC Contract
NHAI Launches Internship Programme to Build Highway Talent Nationwide
Powerplay Rolls Out Procurement-Linked Credit to Unlock Contractor Cash Flows
IREDA Earns ‘Excellent’ MoU Rating for Fifth Year, Cementing Role in Clean Energy Financing
Inox Clean Energy Secures ₹31 Billion Equity at ₹500 Billion Valuation
Centre’s ₹2.35 Billion Port Push in Tamil Nadu, Sonowal Flags Maritime-Led Growth
Indian Railways to Roll Out 52 Reforms in 52 Weeks; Targets Single-Digit Accidents by FY2027
India Stays the Course as Combative Trump Exits International Solar Alliance
Energy Security, Investment and Decarbonisation to Take Centrestage at India Energy Week 2026
Home » International Finance Corp
Tag: International Finance Corp
IFC mulls tie-ups with new bank licence aspirants in India
The private sector investment arm of World Bank, International Finance Corp is looking out to partner with aspirants for new bank licences, as it increases its investment in India to $2 billion this year. IFC is an investor in Kolkata-based microfinance institution Bandhan Financial Services, as well as in non-banking finance company Magma Fincorp, both of which have applied for a banking licence.

