A BlackRock infrastructure arm is pouring up to $335 million into Aditya Birla Group's renewable energy holdings. The Indian conglomerate? They're scrambling to scale up clean power capacity—joining a heated race among major players in the region.



This move signals how traditional finance giants are betting big on green infrastructure. For context, renewable energy investments increasingly overlap with crypto mining operations seeking sustainable power sources. The $335M figure isn't pocket change—it reflects serious institutional conviction in India's energy transition potential.

Aditya Birla's push mirrors what we're seeing across emerging markets: established industrial groups pivoting hard into renewables as regulatory pressure mounts and capital flows toward ESG-compliant assets.
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rug_connoisseurvip
· 12-09 18:30
$33.5 billion invested—Blackstone really is bullish on Indian energy... But here's the question: will this money actually end up supporting clean energy, or will it get siphoned off again?
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AlphaWhisperervip
· 12-09 18:13
ngl, BlackRock's move is pretty bold, putting in 335M just to seize the discourse power in renewable energy. Wait a minute, renewable + crypto mining? Why does this combination feel like they're trying to give miners a "legitimate status"... Things are really heating up in India, all the traditional big players are moving towards green energy, and it's only the ESG narrative that can attract that kind of capital.
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GateUser-7b078580vip
· 12-09 18:12
Data shows that 335M is just the beginning; miners have had their eyes on Indian electricity for a while. Let's wait and see if it hits a historical low. That being said, these ESG-compliant investments are ultimately just a hedge against unreasonable systems. If you look at new capacity added by the hour... well, I'm bullish in the long term but watching for patterns in the short term. BlackRock's move is basically whitewashing green energy mining; if miners consume too much, they'll have to look for new power sources. Whether it eventually collapses or trends positively in the long run depends on the direction of Indian regulatory policies. $335M sounds like a lot, but if you break it down, it's really a bet on declining energy costs, with miners getting access to cheap electricity earlier.
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