The ₹10 crore incentive is just one piece of a much larger picture.
Minister Sanjeev Arora’s announcement makes one thing clear: this isn’t a standalone policy; it’s part of a broader vision where sustainability, industrial growth, and infrastructure development move together.
Punjab has set an ambitious target to generate 85% of its electricity from renewable sources, including solar energy and battery storage systems, over the next five years, strengthening power reliability while reducing long-term environmental impact.
At the same time, infrastructure is scaling rapidly.
Over 2,120 kilometres of urban roads are being developed at a cost of ₹1,300 crore, with parallel expansion across rural areas. Combined with improved ease of doing business and a strong push towards MSME growth, one of Punjab’s biggest demand drivers, this reflects a state that is actively enabling both industry and investment.
And capital is already responding.
With ₹60,256 crore in investments recorded for 2025–26, alongside major commitments like the ₹1,550 crore investment by the JL Oswal Group, Punjab is not just attracting attention; it’s building long-term confidence.
The takeaway?
A pro-industry, pro-investment ecosystem backed by sustainability and infrastructure.
And when policy, capital, and connectivity align, the impact extends far beyond industry.
It reshapes cities.
It strengthens real estate fundamentals.
And it accelerates demand for well-located, future-ready residential developments.