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India Inc Pledges Rs 32.45 Lakh Crore for RE Projects

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India Inc. has pledged Rs 32.45 lakh crore for renewable energy projects till 2030.

Confirming the development, Prahlad Joshi, Union Minister for New & Renewable Energy said the commitment is in line with India’s target of over 500 GW capacity by the same year.

“We received overwhelming commitments from states and Union Territories as well as from the developers, manufacturers, and financial institutes to support our goal of 500 GW by 2030″, the minister said.

He informed that the OEM partners and manufacturers have committed additional manufacturing capacity of 340 GW for solar modules, 240 GW for solar cells, 22 GW for wind turbines, and 10 GW for electrolyzers.

He also spoke about interest in India’s renewable energy sector from foreign countries like Germany and Denmark, highlighting the opening of an Indo-German platform for global financing of renewable energy projects.

Corporate commitments:

Reliance Industries has pledged to add 100 GW of additional renewable capacity installation till 2030, including 20 GW per year of integrated solar PV and 20 GW equivalent of glass.

Adani Group has pledged around Rs 4.05 lakh crore investment in the green energy segment. Moreover, Adani Green Energy has committed to 38.8 GW RE capacity by 2030. Adani New Industries will set up a solar manufacturing plant of 10 GW, wind manufacturing of 5 GW, a green hydrogen production facility of 10 GW (green hydrogen: 0.5 MMTPA, green ammonia 2.8 MMTPA), and an electrolyzer manufacturing plant of 5 GW.

Torrent Power has committed investment worth Rs 64,000 crore for integration of renewable energy with the potential of giving employment to 26,000 people. The company aims to achieve 10 GW of installed RE capacity by 2030, with an investment of Rs 57,000 crore. The company signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Government of Gujarat for the execution of a 5 GW solar, wind, or solar-wind hybrid project at Dwarka District in the state.

It is also setting up 1,00,000 Kilo Tonnes Per Annum (KTPA) Green Ammonia production facility with an investment of Rs 7,200 crore.

It must be noted that companies like NTPC, SJVN, NHPC along with SECI, have released bids for 14 GW of renewable energy, exceeding the target of 10 GW, between June and August of 2024.

Rencent MNRE Achievements  
  • 6.0 GW RE capacity was commissioned between June, July, and August 2024 against the target of 4.5 GW.
  • Non-Fossil Installed Capacity reached 207.76 GW.
  • From June 2024 to August 2024, REIAs have issued RE power procurement bids for 14 GW against a Target of 10 GW.
  • Two Solar Parks completed.
  • 1 Lakh Solar Pumps installed under PM KUSUM.
  • Under PM Surya Ghar Scheme, 3.56 lakh Rooftop Solar systems were installed.
  • Cumulative 13.8 GW Solar Module production commenced in the Solar PLI Scheme.
  • Under the National Green Hydrogen Mission 11 companies were selected under the second tranche for electrolyzer manufacturing for a total capacity of 1500 MW/ annum.
  • Offshore Wind Scheme approved by the Cabinet on 19.06.2024, RFS issued by SECI.
  • IREDA has incorporated a subsidiary “IREDA Global Green Energy Finance IFSC Ltd” in GIFT City.

 

 


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Golden era for wind energy in India?

Renjini Liza Varghese


An interesting news item on renewable energy caught my attention today morning. Wind energy contributed 64.54 billion units in the last three quarters from April-January FY2022-23 to India’s energy basket. It is not surprising that Gujarat and Tamil Nadu lead the pack with 17,062 million units and 15,703 million units respectively. The data was released by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy.

Considering what the wind sector has gone through in the past couple of years, the growth in the wind energy segment is commendable. Overall, only 41% of projects awarded by SECI during 2018-21 were commissioned till December 2022. 23% were cancelled and the balance were delayed due to land acquisition, and evacuation and supply-side constraints.

I remember my stint with a leading wind energy association where we constantly spoke about the need for capacity addition of 3-6 GW per year and moving beyond 10 GW/year before 2020. Those days our efforts did not bear fruits. It doesn’t end here. Credit Rating agency Crisil, in a press release titled: “Wind energy sector set to surge 4-5x on policy tailwinds” reiterated that India added wind energy of 1.6 GW per annum average. Comparatively, the solar energy sector averaged 8.3 GW per annum in the last five fiscals from 2017 to 2022.

But now the climate rather the wind has changed the segment. This time, for the good. The recent development is an upbeat development in the wind energy market segment.

As per CRISIL, moves by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) can crank up India’s annual wind capacity implementation to 6-8 gigawatt (GW) per annum starting fiscal 2026, significantly more than the 1.6 GW annual rate clocked in the past five years.

New Policy 

New policy measures by the MNRE are adding the thrust. One, MNRE has set a goal to award 8 GW of wind tenders per annum. This is significant because wind tendering has been low at just 3.3 GW per annum in the past five fiscals. Secondly, the ministry has replaced the reverse auction process with a single-stage, two-envelope closed bidding. This should curb irrational bidding. We expect tariffs to rise 20-30% over the recent Rs 2.89-2.94 per unit 4 (to provide more than 10% internal rate of return), on account of changes in the bidding process, resource variability at newer sites, etc, CRISIL said in a press release.

It noted that MNRE has mandated that all discovered renewable tariffs for each state will be pooled and offered to discoms at an average pooled tariff by an intermediary such as SECI. That would lower the risk for wind power project developers because SECI fares significantly better than state discoms in terms of payment of dues.

Strict disciplinary actions such as revoking bank guarantees if the project is not delayed by a year or debarment for 5 years if the project is delayed by 18 months will ensure timely completion, CRISIL stated.

“Basis our discussions with developers, considering 8 GW of bidding in fiscal 2024 and 20-24 months to the commission, around 6-8 GW capacity can be installed every year starting FY2026. This factors in policy push by the government. The annual installations could be on the lower side than the tender volume if the historical reasons for the delay that may be beyond the control of developers, persist,” said  Ankit Hakhu, Director, CRISIL Ratings.

Recalling here PM’s recent statement— India’s green energy potential is no less than a  goldmine. Renewable energy contributes more than 40% to the country’s energy basket. And the set target is to achieve 500 GW of renewable energy by 2030.

ACHIEVABLE – no doubt as the ministry is taking proactive steps and the industry is gearing to tap the potential of repowering and offshore wind energy.

 


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