COMMENTARY

POWER UTILITY | Contributed Content, India
Published: 04 Jan 12
863 views


India – the single largest opportunity in solar power in the world
Agostinho Miguel Garcia

India – the single largest opportunity in solar power in the world

India’s Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission is bound to achieve 20 GW until 2022. India has some KW of installed solar power until the kick start of the Mission in 2010. India is one of the two countries in the world with more than one billion and is also home to many persons without electricity. But we are not talking about off-grid applications, we are talking about on-grid and with Fit. India learnt the lesson of Fit and RPS driven PPA and created their own scheme: RPO – Renewable Purchase Obligation – with a reverse bidding to determine the Fit.

The results have been astonishing. The first phase has seen 1000 MW being bid and 500 MW went for CSP while 500 MW went for PV. The quoted prices of Fit for PV were around 7,49 INR (around 0,15 USD). Fit of Italy around 0,4 eur, Fit of Spain around 0,3 eur and Portugal around 0,25 with good solar radiation are actually higher than the Fit of Germany 0,18 eur, so are these values in India so astonishing? India displays plenty of sites with 6 Kwh/m2 and above, while Germany hardly reaches 4,5 Kwh/m2!

Indian Fit scheme grants 25 years at the auctioned price and here the lessons learned seem not to be taken into consideration. Why no bid for the timeframe? Why 25 years? Why not an energy limitation like the Portuguese Fit instead of time frame? States as Gujarat and Rajasthan have witnesses the largest interest, leaving other states wishing for some attention. State initiatives as the one in Karnataka pledge to at least have some power installed on their states and not only on the Indian solar states. Hopefully Tamil Nadu and Andra Pradesh will follow with their own solar state policies.

Why is India not in the solar map? Why is India being overlooked? Why is one of the largest countries in Asia and one of the largest potential for Asian power generation being forgotten?

Some say the cost of financing, some say financing availability, some say bankability, some say: not viable. India’s top companies are involved and gearing to have their own MW being it at the easy PV or the more complicated CSP. India’s top banks are also involved, so what is missing? Foreign participation seems shy for such a large potential.

Will India keep its solar revolution indoor? Why are Asian investors not investing? Why are Koreans and Chinese absent from the market as developers? Why are Chinese only supplying and complaining about the low price of Indian purchases?

India seems to lead the solar revolution in Asia, but it needs the participation of other asian countries. That interest may spark the revolution on other countries and if pieces in India come to 6 INR – the grid cost – will 20 GW continue to be the target for 2022?

Agostinho Miguel Garcia
SunBD – Sun Business Development
Chief of Development and Engineering
http://www.sunbd.pt/

Sign up for our weekly newsletter

Do you know more about this story? Contact us anonymously through this link.

Click here to learn about advertising, content sponsorship, events & rountables, custom media solutions, whitepaper writing, sales leads or eDM opportunities with us.

Tags: Agostinho Miguel Garcia, SunBD – Sun Business Development, India as a solar power market

MORE FROM SUNBD
The electric car is more expensive and pollutes more?
The electric car is more expensive and pollutes more? To answer this question, we must understand what is behind the price and pollution.
Asia has Fits for every flavour!
Top ten Asian solar urban myths
Expensive solar costs impede larger deployment
COMPANIES FEATURED
SunBD
TOP NEWS
China’s slowdown dampens electricity demand
 China’s slowdown dampens electricity demand Power consumption remains flat in China, another symptom of the country’s deceleration.
SBI to finance 70% of new Bokaro thermal unit
Welspun wins solar PV project in Madhya Pradesh
Trina Solar to supply 2.1MW off-grid solar system in Tibet
India's Adani group targets power transmission projects
TEPCO subsidiary acquires Australian wind farm
Japanese town assembly agrees to restart reactors
Canadian Solar to build plant in Japan
Natural gas sector in high growth mode in China
Jinchang City to have over 1GW of added solar capacity
OTHER POWER UTILITY NEWS
Trina Solar to supply 2.1MW off-grid solar system in Tibet
Trina Solar to supply 2.1MW off-grid solar system in Tibet Trina Solar will supply an off-grid solar system project in the Northern Tibetan region of Naqu.
Korea's Shinsung Solar achieves 20.03% cell efficiency
India's Adani group targets power transmission projects
Essar Energy signs PPA for Tori-II thermal plant
Bangladesh's power body owes $450.5 M to banks