For all the hoopla around solar energy, less than 2 MW of power gets produced in India by harnessing the sun. The first phase target of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission (part of the National Action Plan on climate change flagged off by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh a year ago) is to commission 1,100 MW of solar power by 2012, gathering speed to reach 20,000 MW by 2020. This is a figure that sounds utopian to even the greenest energy evangelist. Most installed projects currently operate at below 20 percent of their capacity and funding by banks and financial institutions is slow.
(This story appears in the 03 December, 2010 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)
Really appreciate this article but believe that 2 MW power being produced in india by Solar would be a wrong figure ,25 MW to 30 MW PV based power plants already been commisioned in india
on Jan 7, 2011Panchabuta, has come to understand from sources that as expected, a lot of developers have bid very aggressively and that discounts in excess of 25-30% from the proposed ceiling of the feed in tariffs were offered by developers for Solar PV project. The Solar Thermal side has also witnessed aggressive bidding with the first winning bid having a discount of 31% from the proposed ceiling tariff. The last project to be approved in the Solar Thermal side had a discount of about 20% from the ceiling tariff. Detailed analysis of the bidding, tariff discounts etc is discussed in detailed in Panchabuta, India focused blog on renewable energy and cleantech at: http://goo.gl/mfa1n
on Nov 26, 2010Yes, the cautious lenders amongst the Banks may still be hesitating. It is more because of the newness of Solar Power at utility scale in India and the current opinions of bankers is based on hear- says and impressions. The proactive ones among them are already building India Specific Solar Energy data and Expertise Banks. From our own experience of guiding them we know the same proactive ones among the Banks will lead and whip the cream off the Indian Solar opportunity. The traditional and less proactive ones will come in later for the bigger play with lesser returns. The most interesting outcome of the "Price Discovery" reverse auction could be PV power emerging more cost competitive than Solar Thermal. Wonder what that will do to the NSM targets and the existing distribution of capacities amongst these technologies. An inflection point for PV in India?? Turning Point and Solar energy progress at the speed of light in India? India just might surprise the skeptics. Remember the IT?
on Nov 26, 2010Vijay, wonderful points and leaves one a lot to ponder with. The policy adaptation for the second phase and incorporating some of the learning into it will be a big thing. The launch of the REC market mechanism is a bit thing and with this the RPO should be do able. Specific solar and non solar targets and pricing is another great thing. Now the enforcement of that should happen. It seems to me that the bigger opportunities do lie in Solar in the offgrid applications like solar lanterns, solar water heaters, etc. A case in point would be the success of dlight taking about 8 months to ramp up from a million to two million families impacted and the scale they have been able to achieve. Panchabuta has discussed most of these topics in detail in its India focused blog on renewable energy and cleantech at: http://goo.gl/mfa1n
on Nov 27, 2010