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Government of India Ministry of New and Renewable Energy MNRE.

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Presentation on theme: "Government of India Ministry of New and Renewable Energy MNRE."— Presentation transcript:

1 Government of India Ministry of New and Renewable Energy MNRE

2 175 GW 5 GW10 GW 60 GW 100 GW Solar Wind Biomass Small Hydro Road Map for Renewable Power by 2022

3 Year-wise and Source-wise Distribution of 175 GW (in MWp) Resource 2015-162016-172017-182018-192019-202020-212021-22Total Solar 2,00012,00015,00016,00017,00017,500 97,000 Wind 240041004700530060006700735660000 Biomass 4005007508509501000101610000 SHP 220225100 5000 Commissioned up to 31.03.2015 : Solar - 3,744 MW Wind - 23444 MW Biomass - 4534 MW SHP - 4055 MW

4 Enablers identified for 175 GW  Waste & Barren Land  Low Cost, Long Tenure Capital  Transmission Grid (Inter & Intra-State)  Policy & Regulatory Framework  Improvement in Financial Health of DISCOMs

5 Policy Initiatives for Promotion of Renewables  Proposed amendment in Electricity Act and Tariff Policy including introduction of Renewable Generation Obligation (RGO)  State Electricity Regulatory Commissions (SERCs) of twenty-six States have notified regulatory framework on net-metering and feed-in- tariff to encourage rooftop solar plants  Restoration of Accelerated Depreciation Benefits for Wind Power Projects  A wind Atlas having information at 100 m height has been launched

6  Announcement of National Offshore Wind Energy Policy, 2015  CERC issued forecasting & scheduling regulations for inter-state transmission of wind and solar power in Aug 2015.  Model forecasting & scheduling regulations for intra-state transmission of wind and solar power have been issued by FOR  Augmentation of inter-state and intra-state transmission system – being taken up under Green Energy Corridor project

7 100 GW 40 GW30 GW 10 GW 20 GW Solar Park Unemployed Youth/Farmers Govt./States/ Private/Others Solar Rooftop Road Map for Solar Power by 2022

8 Solar Park18 679 MW for 29 Solar Parks in 21 States approved Solar Power in CPSUs/Govt.913 MW allocated to 13 organizations Canal Top/Canal Banks50 MW Canal Top and 50 MW Canal Banks projects allocated in 8 States Solar Power in Defense185 MW allocated (150 MW – OFB, 10 MW-BSF, 25 MW - BTL) Solar Power by NTPC15000 MW targeted, tenders issued for 2750 MW in 5 States (bundling scheme) Solar Power by SECI3600 MW allocated in 6 States, 1690 MW tenders issued Solar Power installed capacity 5800 MW till 14.03.2016 Grid Connected Solar Rooftop 2051 MW allocated, 140.87 MW installed

9  Solar systems installed on rooftops of residential, commercial, institutional & industrial buildings :  premises.  Electricity generated could be -fed into the grid at regulated feed-in tariffs or -used for self consumption with net-metering approach

10  Germany, USA, Italy, Japan, China are leaders in adopting grid-connected SPV Rooftop systems.  Germany has highest PV installed capacity of over 39.5 GW of which 70% is in rooftop segment (as on 31.12.2015).  China has 37.95 GW solar power of which 6.25 GW is from distributed generation.  Italy has 12.7 GW PV installation with over 60% rooftop systems  FIT is norm in Europe while net-metering is popular in USA.

11  Savings in transmission and distribution losses  Low gestation time  No requirement of additional land  Improvement of tail-end grid voltages and reduction in system congestion with higher self- consumption of solar electricity  Local employment generation  Reduction of power bill by supplying surplus electricity to local electricity supplier

12  About 10 sq.m area per kWp capacity  Cost about Rs.75,000 per kWp  The roof should be shadow free and south facing  Can be installed on slanting, plain and curved roofs  Regulation of SERC, State policy and DISCOMs cooperation for grid connectivity

13  Initial cost Rs.75,000 per kWp  Cost of electricity generation about Rs.6.00 per kWh  Most of commercial, industrial and Government establishments pay about Rs.8- 10 per kWh  Hence the solar rooftop is economically viable

14 Sl. No.StatesTotal 1Andhra Pradesh2000 2Bihar1000 3Chhattisgarh700 4Delhi1100 5Gujarat3200 6Haryana1600 7Himachal Pradesh320 8Jammu & Kashmir450 9Jharkhand800 10Karnataka2300 11Kerala800 12Madhya Pradesh2200 13Maharashtra4700 14Orissa1000 15Punjab2000 16Rajasthan2300 17Tamil Nadu3500 18Telangana2000 19Uttarakhand350 Sl. No.StatesTotal 20Uttar Pradesh4300 21West Bengal2100 22Arunachal Pradesh50 23Assam250 24Manipur50 25Meghalaya50 26Mizoram50 27Nagaland50 28Sikkim50 29Tripura50 30Chandigarh100 31Goa150 32Dadra & Nagar Haveli200 33Daman & Diu100 34Puducherry100 35Andaman & Nicobar Islands 20 36Lakshadweep10 Total40000

15  Ministry is implementing a ‘Grid Connected Rooftop and Small Solar Power Plants Programme’ since 26 th June, 2014.  Plant size ranges from 1 kWp to 500 kWp and 1 kW solar rooftop system requires about 10 sq.m. roof area  Benchmark costs of Grid connected solar rooftops(with out battery) is about Rs. 75,000/kWp. A subsidy of 30% is provided for general category and 70% for special category States, NE States and Islands.  No subsidy is provided for establishments under private and industrial sector.

16  16 States have come out with Solar Policy supporting grid connected rooftop systems :  Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala, Manipur, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and West Bengal.  Remaining 20 States/UTs have to come out with Solar Policy supporting grid connected rooftop systems  Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Goa, Jammu & Kashmir, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Orissa, Sikkim, Tripura, Andaman & Nicobar and Lakshadweep Islands, Chandigarh, Dadra & Nagar Haveli, Daman & Diu, Delhi & Puducherry.

17  SERCs of 26 States/UTs have notified regulations for net- metering/feed-in-tariff mechanism :-  Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Goa, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Meghalaya, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, West Bengal, Andaman & Nicobar and Lakshadweep Islands, Chandigarh, Dadra & Nagar Haveli, Daman & Diu, Delhi and Pondicherry have notified regulations for net- metering/feed-in-tariff mechanism  SERCs of remaining following 10 States may notify regulations for grid connected rooftop systems:-  Arunachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Jharkhand, Telangana, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura should notify regulations for net- metering/feed-in-tariff.

18  The Net Metering mechanism shall allow the consumer to reduce its electricity requirement from grid  The utility benefits by avoiding purchase of electricity from short term market  Electricity generation at load center also minimises the distribution losses of electricity  26 States/UTs have announced regulations for net-metering

19 Data received from Govt. Buildings844 nos. Average TariffRs. 9.37 per kWh The maximum tariff paid by buildingRs 15.78 Per KWh The minimum tariff paid by buildingRs 1.34 per KWh The potential estimated for rooftop installation 1450.51 MW No. of Institutes paying above Rs. 7.0/- per Kwh394 nos. (46.7%) No. of Institutes paying above Rs. 8.0/- per Kwh226 nos. (26.8%) No. of Institutes paying above Rs. 9.0/- per Kwh134 nos. (15.9%) No. of Institutes paying above Rs. 10.0/- per kwh89 nos. (10.5%) No. of Institutes paying above Rs. 11.0/- per Kwh51 nos. (6.0%)

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21  Model 1: Self financing of balance cost  Model 2: Installation through RESCO Mode  Model 3: Installation through leasing model  Model 4: Installation through concessional loans  Model 5: Self financing of complete cost without MNRE incentive

22  Fiscal incentives such as accelerated depreciation, concessional custom duty, excise duty exemptions and income tax holiday for 10 years  Loans for system aggregators from Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency Limited (IREDA) at concessional interest rate (9.9% to 10.75% per annum)  Under Priority Sector Lending, loans are available upto Rs. 10 lakhs for individuals and upto Rs. 15 crore for renewable energy projects  Bank loans as a part of home loan/ home improvement loan for solar rooftop systems

23 As on 07.03.2016 Sl. No. State/UTsSanctioned capacity (MWp) In-principle approved capacity (MWp) Total Sanctioned and approved capacity (MWp) Total Achievements (MWp) ABCDEF 1Andhra Pradesh9.5030.0039.504.071 2Bihar0.00 0.10 3Chhattisgarh5.006.2011.2017.08 4Chandigarh8.0612.4420.506.225 5Delhi8.00 11.438 6Gujarat5.756.0011.7523.415 7Goa2.00 0.00 8Jharkhand0.005.00 0.186 9J&K0.007.00 1.00 10Haryana5.00 3.538 11Himachal Pradesh0.00 0.8940.201 12Kerala15.28 1.02 13Karnataka0.000.935 9.451 14Madhya Pradesh5.00110.00115.000.60 15Maharashtra0.00 6.844 16Manipur0.003.400.00 17Odisha4.00 0.86

24 As on 07.03.2016 Sl. No. State/UTsSanctioned capacity (MWp) In-principle approved capacity (MWp) Total Sanctioned and approved capacity (MWp) Total Achievements (MWp) ABCDEF 18Puducherry0.000.02 0.00 19Punjab5.0020.0025.0026.188 20Rajasthan6.0025.0031.005.882 21Tamil Nadu11.74300.00311.7415.392 22Tripura0.00 23Telangana4.0070.0074.008.963 24Uttarakhand7.0044.0051.007.945 25 Uttar Pradesh 7.00 3.715 26West Bengal5.38 5.981.192 27Andaman and Nicober Island 0.001.00 0.00 28Lakshadweep0.001.00 0.00 Sub total113.71638.60757.199155.406 29Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) 149.60750.00949.6039.274* 30Ministry of Railways52.50450.00502.501.50 31Allocation to PSUs101.54211.49317.35611.365 Total417.352050.102526.655168.271 *State wise achievement of SECI included against each State.

25  The existing financial outlay of Rs. 600 crore during 12 th Plan period up-scaled to Rs. 5,000 crore for implementation upto 2019-20.  Existing pattern of capital subsidy at the rate of upto 30% for the general category States and upto 70% for North Eastern States including Sikkim, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir and Lakshadweep, Andaman & Nicobar Islands) retained.  No subsidy for commercial and industrial establishments in the private sector.  The Government Institutions including public sector undertakings shall not be eligible for subsidy; instead they be given achievement-linked incentives/awards.

26  Installation as per MNRE standards for ◦ Solar Modules ◦ Inverters ◦ Structure ◦ Wiring ◦ Safety arrangements ◦ Fuses  Interconnection with grid as per CEA regulation  Metering and Billing as per the SERC regulations Technical specifications of equipment as per international standards published by MNRE

27  Reference to Net Metering regulation and policy ◦ 27 states has published their net metering regulations ◦ 16 states has come out with their policy for promotion of rooftop  Sustainable Business Models ◦ Industrial & Commercial ◦ Government ◦ Institutions ◦ Residential  Lack of knowledge, Information and financial incentives to customers about these systems  Developer risk as the sector is new and lack of well established developers with proven track record  Risk with distribution companies (DISCOMS)  Lack of trained manpower  Little long-term operation and maintenance expertise with rooftop owners & developers

28  Eligibility for GCRT installation in state  Does the state regulations allows grid connection of rooftop solar projects?  Availability of capacity addition at Distribution Transformer  Prefeasibility study  Solar resource assessment  Roof structural integrity  Shading analysis  System sizing  Cost calculations  Requirements of permits/ clearances/ approvals from various authorities (if any) Quality check  Quality standards and certifications for the system components as per MNRE standards Project Annual Maintenance contract  AMC agreement for the first 5-10 years Performance monitoring  Remote generation monitoring Policy incentives  Central or state subsidy Insurance arrangement (if any)

29  Lack of availability of attractive project debt ◦ Causes for the situation were cited as:  Low sensitization of banks  Lack of standard bank processes/protocols for rooftop solar lending  Educating bank officials, especially outside of head offices or regional head offices (for instance, local branches)  There is a general expectation of different financing routes for different project sizes and types: ◦ Small projects, especially for residential and small commercial consumers are expected to be financed through consumer loans ◦ Large projects such as for large commercial and industrial consumers are expected to be financed through project finance routes; it is not clear how this can be different for banks or NBFCs or other lenders  Clarity is required on the process and related details required by MNRE for subsidy disbursement through banks

30  Policy uncertainties at national-level hindering sectoral progress  Hybrid Solar PV system with battery storage may also be considered  Need for organizing 2-3 days extensive training programmes at regional-level covering policy, regulatory and technical aspects of Grid-connected Rooftop Solar PV power plants  List of Third-Party inspectors which may be used by the Banks  Standardize process of verification to be adopted for inspection of the rooftop SPV power plants  There is a need to develop a standardized checklist to guide banks in streamlining their project lending process  Bank manual may be provided by MNRE with step-by-step process/checklist and quality standards to aid in assessment of loan applications

31  The regulatory framework is needed for setting up of the projects, operation of net-metering mechanism and providing connections with distribution line. The remaining States/UTs i.e. Arunachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Jharkhand, Telangana, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura should also notify regulations.  Electricity Distribution Companies may develop transparent mechanism for speedy approval of net-metering and connectivity.  The regulatory framework needs to be effectively followed by DISCOMs in those States where the regulations have been notified.  States may consider amending suitable building bye-laws to make the solar rooftops compulsory.  Although RBI has notified renewable sector under Priority Sector Lending, it needs to be made effective at the branch level to ease the lending to the borrowers.

32  Issue Governments orders to ask Urban Local Bodies to make solar rooftop mandatory in building bye-laws.  Provide rebate on property tax.  Ensure capacity building of concerned State Officials including DISCOMs.  To simplify procedure for installation of solar rooftop systems preferably through single window clearance mechanism.

33  Empanelment of Channel Partners (462nos.)/New Entrepreneur(175nos) /Govt. agencies (16 nos.)  Arrangement of low cost financing from foreign banks like Kfw, World Bank, ADB etc  Development of software “SPIN”  Continuous follow up with all the Ministries/Govt. departments for installation of rooftop solar plants

34 ModuleIndia Make Aggregate Plant Capacity 404 kWp Rooftop OwnerManipal University CityJaipur StateRajasthan Project CostRs. 2.86 Cr CFA through SECIRs. 86 Lakh

35 ModuleIndia Make Plant Capacity115 kWp/85 kWp Rooftop OwnerDMRC Project SiteAnand Vihar/Pragati Maidan CityDelhi

36 ModuleIndia Make Plant Capacity130 kWp Rooftop OwnerISBT Kashmere Gate CityDelhi StateDelhi Project CostRs. 114.3 Lakhs CFA through SECI Rs. 30.3 Lakhs

37 ModuleIndia Make Plant Capacity360 kWp Rooftop OwnerSuper Auto Forge Pvt., Ltd., CityChennai StateTamilnadu Project CostRs. 3.06 Cr CFA through SECI Rs. 92 lacs

38 ModuleIndia Make Plant Capacity100 kWp Rooftop OwnerRockwell Industries CityHyderabad StateAndhra Pradesh Project CostRs. 0.74 Cr CFA through SECI Rs. 22.2 lacs

39 ModuleIndia Make Plant Capacity300 kWp Rooftop OwnerIIT Madras CityChennai StateTamilnadu Project CostRs. 2.49 Cr CFA through SECI Rs. 75 lacs

40 ModuleIndia Make Plant Capacity500 kWp Rooftop OwnerMedanta Hospital CityGurgaon StateHaryana Project CostRs. 4.15 Cr CFA through SECI Rs. 1.24 Cr

41 ModuleIndia Make Plant Capacity100 kWp Rooftop OwnerNIAS CityBengaluru StateKarnataka Project CostRs. 83 lacs CFA through SECIRs. 25 lacs

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47 12.4 MWp rooftop plant installed in a single roof. Another 7.1 MWp on seven different roofs in the campus. Cumulative 19.5 MWp rooftop systems in the campus of Dera Beas, Amritsar in Punjab.

48 Thank you


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