India is on the cusp of a solar energy revolution. The Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission (JNNSM) kick-started the development of large, mega-watt scale, solar plants.
In combination with the Gujarat solar power programme, JNNSM has resulted in an installed capacity of 1047 MW as on November 31, 2012. What was crucial for the success of phase-I (2010-13) of the JNNSM was a realistic price discovery through reverse competitive bidding on energy charges (Rs/kWh) and bundling of solar power with existing low cost NTPC power. This worked as an incentive for utilities and an assured buyer in the form of NTPC Vidyut Vyapar Nigam Ltd (NVVN).
The accompanying graph shows the dramatic reduction in solar tariffs since the launch of JNNSM from around Rs. 18/kWh to around Rs 7/kWh.
With phase-I coming to an end, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has recently (December 4) published a draft policy document outlining the way forward for phase-II (2013-17) of the JNNSM.
While on the whole it lays down a good framework, certain policy proposals, especially for large megawatt-scale solar power, could make it a case of ‘two steps forward one step back’. This article proposes some alternatives.
Viability Gap Funding
MNRE has proposed to promote large MW-scale solar power through Viability gap funding (VGF). Projects requiring minimum VGF (in Rs. Cr./MW) to supply electricity to utilities at a pre-determined tariff (say Rs 5-6/kWh) will be selected through competitive bidding. This is in stark deviation from energy (kWh) based bidding undertaken for solar as well as conventional generation.
As the draft itself notes, the biggest concern with capital grants under VGF is severing the link with long-term project performance. It further states that there would be “no penalty on lower generation or unsatisfactory performance on selected projects.” Compare this with its own key learning from phase-I of the JNNSM, “Generation of PV projects so far has been in accordance with estimates, and higher in many cases.”
This has been solely possible as project revenues are completely linked to electricity generation thereby inter-locking profitability with long-term project performance. Capital grants would only lead to a race to minimise capex at the expense of performance.
Hence, it is imperative to continue with reverse competitive bidding for solar power on energy basis (Rs/kWh) as was done in phase-I and is also routinely done by several States (e.g. Karnataka and Odisha). If the National Clean Energy Fund (NCEF), through which VGF would be supported does not allow such long-term payments, its rules need to be changed rather than changing well-established norms of energy generation-based payments.
Domestic Content Requirement
This is another serious policy, and politically vexed, issue. On one hand is the possibility of low-cost solar power (on the basis of cheaper imported modules with access to low cost debt) leading to higher deployment and thereby increased jobs in project construction and long-term operation and maintenance cost.
On the other hand, is somewhat higher tariff but with incentives and protection in the case of the domestic module and cell manufacturing industry. While the JNNSM has an important objective of promoting the solar manufacturing industry in India, it remains an open question whether a domestic content requirement (DCR) would be an adequate response in the current global dynamics of the solar PV sector.
The existing solar manufacturing set-up in the country has a number of inherent disadvantages (continued dependence on imported wafers/poly-silicon, older non-integrated set-ups at higher costs and at much smaller scales than present industry standards) in comparison to new industry set-ups.
These factors are leading to quite sub-optimal conditions in which Indian PV manufacturing (limited to modules and cells) is taking place. Hence, it would be very difficult to compete on price with PV production from newer industry set-ups and more so if these set-ups were highly incentivised (as has been claimed of the Chinese PV industry) and while the global glut on module supply remains.
Therefore, just a DCR would be an inadequate response for incentivising setting up of world class PV manufacturing in India.
A far more long-term and integrated view (keeping in mind global sectoral dynamics) needs to be evolved and serious industry players backed by latest technology and R&D with a focus on innovation need to be incentivised (“Don’t support solar manufacturers now”, Business Line, November 28).
This could be done through facilitating setting up of an eco-system of solar manufacturing industry. Such a strategy needs to be evolved in synergy with the Department of Science and Technology and the national industrial and manufacturing policies. New incentives which would allow setting up of large-scale integrated PV plants in India need to be put in place.
Rooftop systems
With regard to promoting grid connected rooftop solar PV in urban India, a national policy on net metering to encourage in situ generation, primarily for self consumption should be brought forth.
Consumer tariffs of commercial and high-end residential consumers in many States are already high enough (or will soon be) to incentivise them to shift to solar. Hence the option of in situ generation for self-consumption, which is more socially equitable and financially viable in comparison to subsidising such systems through budgetary capital grants needs to be promoted.
Solar Parks
MNRE’s initiative on supporting solar parks is a welcome one with the added benefit of better transmission planning and grid management coupled with greater transparency in Case-II bidding. However, aspects like long-term land leasing (already practised in Rajasthan) and profit-sharing with land owners/community as is routinely done in Europe and the US would make this initiative more socially inclusive.
An integrated solar policy that facilitates least cost procurement, emphasises performance-based incentives and develops effective eco-system for rooftop and other decentralised solar applications can aid ‘faster, more inclusive and sustainable growth’, the guiding spirit of the 12th Plan.
(The authors are with Prayas Energy Group.)