Shirdi Sai Electricals plans Rs 1,000 cr investment on transformer capacity, conductor unit
Shirdi Sai Electricals is planning a Rs 1,000 crore investment to expand transformers manufacturing capacity and set up a conductor unit in YSR District. The company aims to increase capacity and contribute to economic development while targeting a revenue of Rs 5,000 crore. The outlook for transformers and transmission industries is positive.
Shirdi Sai Electricals is planning to invest around Rs 1,000 crore to expand transformers manufacturing capacity to cater to the growing domestic and international demand, and set up a conductor unit, CMD N Visweswara Reddy said.
The investment amount will also be used to set up an ingots to conductor manufacturing unit in YSR District (formerly known as Kadapa), the Chairman and Managing Director (CMD) said.
The company will use internal accruals to execute these business plans over the next 8-12 months, Reddy told PTI during an interview.
Shirdi Sai Electricals Ltd (SSEL) will build a capacity of up to 53,000 MVA (Mega Volt Amp) transformers annually, up from the present 33,500 MVA, he said.
The capacity of company's Kadapa unit is 10,000 MVA, while that of the facility at Naini in Uttar Pradesh is 20,000 MVA, while Indo Tech Transformers Ltd, which is a listed entity of the group, has an installed capacity of 3,500 MVA.
The plan is to scale up the capacity of Kadapa plant to up to 25,000 MVA and that of Indo Tech Transformers unit near Chennai to 8,000 MVA, Reddy said, adding that at Naini the vision is to increase the capacity utilisation to 100 per cent from the current 10-15 per cent. ''These investments will create direct and indirect employment opportunities and contribute to the economic development of the areas around the plants,'' he said.
The CMD said around Rs 300 crore is being invested to set up the ingots to conductor unit in Kadapa through a wholly owned arm Shuchi Alloys and Conductors Technologies Pvt Ltd. The capacity of the plant is 300 tonnes of ingots to conductors per day, he said. Around 50 per cent of the production will be consumed by the company's EPC transmission business, while the rest will be sold in the open market, he said. On his outlook on the transformers and transmission industries, Reddy said the sectors are expected to continue to perform well over next 10 years with the government's focus on building of power and infrastructure projects across the country.
New age transformers and more efficient transmission will help reduce aggregate technical and commercial (AT&C) losses, he said. Established in 1994 as a transformer repairing company, SSEL Group has over the years grown to become India's largest transformer manufacturing company.
It is also into sets up transmission projects on EPC basis. SSEL Group employs around 5,000 people and had a revenue of Rs 2,680 crore in FY 2022-23. The group is targeting a revenue of around Rs 5,000 crore in the current fiscal year, Reddy added.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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