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Foreign firms look to increase solar power presence in India

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Foreign firms look to increase solar power presence in India


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A villager girl switches on a light powered by solar energy in the village of Morabandar on Elephanta Island, off the coast of Mumbai in western India on late night

MORABANDAR: The Elephanta Caves, a UNESCO World Heritage Site off the coast of India’s financial capital Mumbai, draw hundreds of thousands of tourists every year.


But when the last of the wooden ferry boats leaves at nightfall for the mainland 14 kilometres (8.5 miles) away, the villagers who live permanently on the island are plunged into darkness.

A new scheme, launched this week by an Australian firm, aims to change that, providing three villages with round-the-clock electricity for the first time by harnessing power from the country’s most abundant energy source – sunshine.

The initiative by the Sydney-based Solar-Gem to run LED lamps from panels that soak up the sun’s rays and store them as electricity in battery units comes as domestic and foreign firms look to India as a growth market for renewable energy.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said he wants the country to become a world leader in the sector, not just to cut a crippling energy deficit that could hinder development but for security of supply and to tackle climate change.

Government figures from the end of November showed that highly-polluting coal accounted for nearly 55 percent of India’s total energy production.

Renewable energy, most of it from wind power, provides 10 per cent. Solar energy use is negligible.

Now India’s National Solar Mission aims to source 20,000 megawatts of electricity from solar power by 2022 – about 4,000 megawatts more than the current capacity provided by all forms of renewable energy.

The head of Solar-Gem, Khimji Vaghjiani, said solar power had “enormous scope” in India, as 80,000 villages have no electricity and plans for conventional power plants are often delayed over land or environmental concerns about pollution.

“Trying to distribute power is going to be very difficult (in India),” he told AFP before the launch on Monday evening.

“What do we do in the meantime where villagers are using kerosene and candles? We can put them (solar panels) into every household, moving them away from harmful kerosene and costly diesel.”Indian companies likely to benefit from the focus on solar energy include Tata BP Solar – a tie-up between Tata Power and BP Solar, a subsidiary of the British oil giant – and Reliance Solar, part of the country’s largest private sector firm, Reliance Industries.

Foreign players are also sensing opportunities, as the price of solar power technology falls and overseas governments look to support India as it tries to switch from a reliance on fossil fuels to “clean” energy sources.

Solar-Gem, whose initiative is a jointly funded Australian-Indian project, said India could become a manufacturing hub for its technology while France’s Solairedirect last week announced plans to set up in the country.

Leading overseas solar technology firms, particularly in the United States, however, are said to be concerned about Indian restrictions on imports and believe they could hinder attempts to boost solar power production.

Manish Ram, from the energy and climate unit at environmental group Greenpeace, said the country’s solar energy target was “very feasible” and there was no reason why India, with its warm, sunny climate, could not generate more.

Investment in “off-grid” energy schemes such as that on Elephanta Island could be the way forward for hard-to-reach rural areas, he said, as “the centralised system has failed to deliver” with power cuts widespread where supplies exist.

“Decentralised energy is definitely an option. But it should be done in the right way,” he said.

Local people could sell back surplus energy to the grid, he added, while the government should provide subsidies, as it does to the coal industry and as China has done, to offset the higher costs of solar units. –AFP
 
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National Vidyut Vyapar Nigam has just released the list of developers selected under JNNSM for setting up solar power projects.

List of Developers – Solar PV

5 MW PV project by Mumbai based Camelot Enterprises Pvt Ltd at Kalhe in Maharashtra.
5 MW PV project by Gurgaon based Khaya Solar Projects Pvt Ltd at Village Mundwa , Nagaur Tehsil in Nagaur District of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by DDE Renewable Energy, Faridabad at Village Bhojas, in Khinvsar tehsil, Nagaur District of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Electromech Maritech Pvt Ltd, Pune at at Village Bhojas, in Khinvsar tehsil, Nagaur District of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Finehope Allied Energy Pvt Ltd, New Delhi at Village Bhojas, in Khinvsar tehsil, Nagaur District of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Vasavi Solar Power, Hyderabad at Village Bhojas, in Khinvsar tehsil, Nagaur District of Rajasthan
5 MW PV project by Newton Solar Power, Ahmedabad at Village Bhojas, in Khinvsar tehsil, Nagaur District of Rajasthan
5 MW PV project by Greentech Power Pvt Ltd, Hyderabad at Village Bhojas, in Khinvsar tehsil, Nagaur District of Rajasthan
5 MW PV project by Saidham Overseas Pvt Ltd, Gurgaon at Village Bhojas, in Khinvsar tehsil, Nagaur District of Rajasthan
5 MW PV project by Mahindra Solar One Pvt Ltd, Mumbai at Village Amla in Phalodi, district , Jodhpur of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Azure Power (Rajasthan) Pvt Ltd, New Delhi, at Kathali Village, Jayal Tehsil, District Nagaur of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Maharashtra Seamless Ltd, Gurgaon at Village & Tehsil Pokaran in JAisalmer district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Viraj Renewables Energy Pvt Ltd, Mumbai at Village Rawre, Phalodi tehsil, in Jodhpur district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Northwest Energy Pvt Ltd, Mumbai at Village Kantia in district Nagaur of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by SunEdison Energy Pvt Ltd at Village Deh, Tehsil Kolayat in Bikaner district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Alex Spectrum Radiation Pvt Ltd at Village Gajner, Kolkayat Tehsil in Bikaner district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Indian Oil Corp, New Delhi at Village MArudi in Barmer district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Punj Lloyd Infrastructure Ltd in Phalodi Village, Bap tehsil in Jodhpur district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Bhaskar Green Power Pvt Ltd in Village Pareware in Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Amrit Animation Pvt Ltd, Kolkata in Lanwa village, Pokaran tehsil, in Jaisalmer district.
5 MW PV project by Oswal Woollen Mills Ltd , Ludhiana in Natisara village, Phalodi tehsil in Jodhpur district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Precision Technik Pvt Ltd, Kolkata in Nokh village, Pokaran Tehsil, in Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan.
5 MW PV project by Karnataka Power Corporation, Bangalore at Belakavadi village, Lalavalli tehsil in Mandya district of Karnataka.
5 MW PV project by Coastal Projects Ltd, Hyderabad at Murudi village, Molakalmur taluk in Chitradurga district of Karnataka.
5 MW PV project by Ritwik Projects Pvt Ltd, Hyderabad at Kutagulla village , Kadiri tehsil in Anantapur district of Andhra Pradesh.
5 MW PV project by Saisudhir Energy Ltd , Hyderabad at T.Veerapuram village, Rayadurg Taluk in Anantapur district of Andhra Pradesh.
5 MW PV project by Welspun Solar AP Pvt Ltd New Delhi at Thummala Village, Amadgur Mandal in Anantpur district of Andhra Pradesh.
5 MW PV project by Electrical Manufacturing co Ltd , Kolkata at Naini village in Allahabad district of Uttar Pradesh.
5 MW PV project by Alex Solar Pvt Ltd, Kolkata at Khurda in Khurda district of Orissa.
5 MW PV project by CCCL Infrastructure Ltd, Chennai in Kombukaranatham village in Tuticorin district of Tamil Nadu.
List of Developers – Solar Thermal

50 MW Solar Thermal project by Megha Engineering & Infrastructres Ltd , Hyderabad at Viranapalle village, Pamidi Mandal in Anantapur district of Andhra Pradesh.
100 MW Solar Thermal project by Lanco Infratech Ltd, Hyderabad at Chinnu Village , Nachana Tehsil in Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan.
100 MW Solar Thermal project by KVK Energy Ventures Pvt Ltd, Hyderabad at Chinnu Village , Nachana Tehsil in Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan.
100 MW Solar Thermal project by Rajasthan Sun Technique Energy Pvt Ltd, NAvi Mumbai at Ladkan village, Kolayat district in Bikaner district of Rajasthan.
20 MW Solar Thermal project by Aurum Renewable Energy , Mumbai at Mojap village, Dwarka tehsil in Jamnagar district of Gujarat.
50 MW Solar Thermal project by Godawari Power & Ispat Ltd, Raipur at Village Pareware in Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan.
50 MW Solar Thermal project by Corporate Ispat Alloys Ltd, Mumbai in Nokh village, Pokaran Tehsil, in Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan.

NVVN Selects 37 Solar Developers in the First Phase | Energy Industry Monitor
 
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Pioneer avers solar power’s now cheaper than kerosene


It’s a segment one rarely hears about, even in the supercharged discussions about the country’s solar future and clean energy, but distributed solar power seems to have left behind its bigger cousin in the race to achieving business-model sustainability.

As big companies fall over one another to convert the Thar desert into a sea of solar panels with government subsidies, Amit Chugh, the pioneer of distributed solar sector in the country, says he is happy to stand and watch.

Distributed solar refers to power that’s generated from panels that doesn’t go into a grid, but straight to the user.

“Please do not subsidise this in an unsustainable manner,” says Chugh, who was chronicled in 2007 by Time magazine for abandoning a cushy job with a multinational in Malaysia and starting out on a journey to sell solar panels and lamps to the tens of millions of Indians still untouched by electricity.

Among the hue and cry of industry demanding higher and higher subsidies to roll out solar projects, Chugh strikes a diffident pose, calling subsidies a ‘market spoiler’. While it may appear to be superficial bravado at first, a look at Chugh’s achievements forces one to rethink.

As a founder of Cosmic Ignite along with Stanford University alumni Matt Scott, the finance-professional turned green energy entrepreneur is responsible for bringing solar power to more than one lakh families in the most backward of India’s districts. “Yes, we manage to make a profit,” he said.

The Mighty Light, a solar light that also powers a radio and can charge a cellphone, sells for just Rs1,000. It includes a small solar panel that is kept outside the home/hut during the day.
Some nifty innovation and steadily declining solar module prices has meant Mighty Light sells for half the price it used to three years back.

Unlike big solar farms, which have to be subsidised to the extent of nearly 75%, Chugh says the technology for ‘distributed solar’ is here and now.

“Our product costs Rs1,000 and gives 24 hours of light on one charge. It is actually cheaper than kerosene when you spread it over the full lifetime,” Chugh said. “The solution, technologically, is there.. If 700 million people can buy a mobile phone that costs Rs3,000 or more, they can surely spend Rs1,000 for energy,” he said.

What is missing, Chugh points out, are market ‘enablers’. In other words, while it may indeed be cheaper than a kerosene in the long run, how does one convince the ‘bottom of the Indian pyramid’ to save up and shell out Rs1,000 at one go?

“Most of them don’t even have land to give as collateral,” Chugh said.

Having attacked the bottom of the pyramid for more than three years, he is wary of marketing evangelists.

“The fortune is not there now, don’t believe it,” he said, having seen some of his earlier products fail to attract his target customers. “There’s this big bubble of the so-called fortune at thebottom of the pyramid,” said Chugh, while attending the TIE Entrepreneur Summit in New Delhi last week.

Chugh is currently attacking the problem by tying up with microfinance players, instead of trying to take advantage of some of the old government schemes that provide small subsidies to families that buy solar lanterns.

“We stayed away from the government because you get sucked into the dependency syndrome. You become like an NGO and all your time goes in just walking those corridors. We don’t get a single rupee of subsidy today,” he said.

Because of the way government works, he said, most of the money meant for solar lanterns have failed to reach the intended beneficiaries.

Chugh, however, believes the government should come up with plans for distributed solar firms as well under the ongoing National Solar Mission, instead of just for firms vying to put up large solar farms.

Unlike coal and hydro, solar lends itself to being produced where it is consumed. As a result, solar power does not have the handicap of losing 35% in transmission as in the case of traditional power that is carried from a big plant in one corner of the country to another where consumers exist.

However, under the Centre’s Solar Mission, out of the 1,300 mw of capacity to be built in three years, 1,000 mw is to be in centralised plants called solar farms. But for the remaining 300 mw, the government is yet to announce any incentive scheme or programme.

Chugh believes it is a temporary setback for the distributed segment and expects a master plan from the government on this segment in 2011.

“For 60 years, centralised generation is so deeply ingrained in everybody’s mind and the Planning Commission that every policy that comes out has a focus on centralised (generation) first,” he said.

For now, Cosmic Ignite is focused on expanding sustainably, if not at the fastest pace.

The path blazed by Chugh and Scott has already seen many others jump in with similar all-in-one products, including some with deeper pockets and more aggressive expansion plans than Cosmic.

But Chugh is happy where he is. “We have invested less than $1 million in the venture.. There are firms that are investing millions of investor money. But we believe it is important to be profitable even as we grow,” he said.
 
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Solar has been around from beginning but not enough funds were allocated for its development because US congressmen owned oil companies.

Any how with China in competition there is no choice to float an equivalent in market.

Solar is the right approach and best way forward for very obvious reasons which general public fail to see.

Dis-honest govt. of Pakistan is openly working against Pakistan.
 
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This is good news. Alternative energy is the way to go but I think that while solar power is not going to be the primary energy source in the future (unless we hit a major breakthrough). Nuclear power seems more viable at this stage.
 
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Solar has been around from beginning but not enough funds were allocated for its development because US congressmen owned oil companies.

Any how with China in competition there is no choice to float an equivalent in market.

Solar is the right approach and best way forward for very obvious reasons which general public fail to see.

Dis-honest govt. of Pakistan is openly working against Pakistan.
The current government has launched electrification of 7000+ villages in Sindh and Baluchistan by solar means...lets not be too carried away by mushy propaganda.
 
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since it requires lot of space, i guess wouldn't be too successful in India.
 
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still it wouldn't even help to power 1/5 of India...i guess.
 
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our whole desert is empty.

Well Yeah, that desert could be of a Lot of Significance when It comes to Exploring Solar Energy.... But at present India Has Not taken it up seriously and Are taking up more of Wind energy and Researching on Wind Energy rather than Solar....

But govt bears 50% of the cost for your effort in Making your House Powered with Solar, My House is Completely solar....
 
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Well Yeah, that desert could be of a Lot of Significance when It comes to Exploring Solar Energy.... But at present India Has Not taken it up seriously and Are taking up more of Wind energy and Researching on Wind Energy rather than Solar....

But govt bears 50% of the cost for your effort in Making your House Powered with Solar, My House is Completely solar....

AMCA, i have seen lots of companies procuring land in western rajasthan for that purpose(solar+wind).The rates of per beegha(132*132 feet) has doubled in that reason within 5 years and there are around 50 companies involved.

But till now its been limited to land procurement, but future of renewable energy seems rosy there.
 
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