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Solar power can be for India what shale is for the US

SpArK

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Solar power can be for India what shale is for the US

11 Dec, 2014

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The new government has unfurled plans to build 100 gw of solar power by 2022. Here are a few suggestions to execute this grand vision:

First, it's time the general perception thatsolar energy is expensive is removed.

  • India gets 70% more solar radiation than European countries. This means the same solar panels yield 70% more power in India. In addition, peak demand in India coincides for 70-80% of the time during which solar energy is harnessed.
  • This peak demand is mostly met by diesel, which costs almost double that of solar electricity, currently at Rs 6-7 per kWh.

So, when we commission a solar plant, it will displace diesel for 70-80% of its generation and imported coal for the rest. At all times, solar is substituting for imported energy, which is far more expensive.

  • Second, adequate capital should be raised without crowding out investments in other sectors. The proposed 100 gw capacity requires about $125 billion, of which $90 billion will be debt financing. The global financial crisis has created a great opportunity for availing cheaper credit from global markets.


As per International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates, green energy will receive almost 60% of the $5 trillion expected to be invested in new power plants over the next decade. Solar's requirement is less than 2% of this amount.

The Holy Grail of successful financing is effective allocation of risks between different stakeholders — in this case the consumer, the investor, central/state governments and the developer. The development cost and schedule risk are best borne by technically competent solar power developers once a power purchase agreement (PPA) is signed with a state electricity board (SEB). The developer is in the best situation to procure land, negotiate for panel prices with investors and execute the project expeditiously.

  • Fortunately, solar power requires far fewer clearances than for coal and doesn't require contiguous land. The government should put a 25 mw per bid floor to ensure technical and financial competence of the bidder.

A big part of solar energy costs is the cost of debt, since fuel costs are zero and operational costs are minimal. Any action by government to reduce interest cost will reduce the cost of solar energy and accelerate its adoption. A foreign lender will view depreciation of currency as a risk since the tariff is designated in rupees and will want to be compensated for that higher risk.

The government/RBI should mitigate that risk away from foreign lenders. This potentially has no cost to the government/RBI since implementation of solar energy will contribute to the appreciation of the rupee. This is because we estimate forexsavings of more than $500 billion over a 25-year period from the commissioning of 100 gw solar power and substituting the use of diesel and imported coal.

The developer is incurring a major portion of costs in dollars, but is shielding the consumer from rupee depreciation risk by designating the tariff in rupees. Solar investments' dollar economic internal rate of return to the Indian economy is in the high teens while the borrowing of debt could be only at 5-6%. The economic surplus from each project is transferred to and aggregated in the larger Indian economy. Hence, the role of the RBI and government is perfectly justified and is crucial in achieving this grand vision.

If developers can avail of the debt in rupee at 5-6% — i.e. at the same interest as that of international dollar denominated debt, they can provide solar power at less than Rs 5/kWh, and that too with no escalation in future. They also don't strain the domestic banks and can raise all the debt abroad.

  • The government can easily raise about $15-20 billion per annum over the next five years from external sources including NRIs, multilateral agencies, development banks, sovereign wealth funds and lend directly to projects once the PPA is signed up. This will also accelerate development of solar projects since raising debt financing for individual projects can consume a lot of resources.

One must also ensure reliability of cashflows from solar projects. There are substantial credit risks which hound the power sector due to the deteriorating credit profile of the SEBs and the lax enforcement of the renewable purchase obligation (RPO) mechanism. The state government needs to backstop the PPAs with the SEBs and ensure strict compliance of the RPOs.

The Centre should provide a guarantee that if states/SEBs do not pay their solar developer in time, they will step up and take it out of allocation to the states. Only those states that sign up for this programme should be entitled to the foreign exchange risk covered by the central government/RBI and avail of cheap solar power.

  • The benefits of tapping into our own clean energy source are unmatchable from an energy security viewpoint, climate change mitigation, adoption of future-proof technology and developing quicker power sources, generation of employment accelerating our growth rate. There is little doubt that the government needs to ensure reliable and cost-effective energy supply to ensure making the 'Make in India' programme a resounding success. There are few initiatives so impactful and so easily doable for our country. Solar can be the shale equivalent of India.


Solar power can be for India what shale is for the US - Page2 - The Economic Times
 
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Problem of land. Massive land required per MW of solar power compared to almost any other means.
 
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I read somewhere that govt. is planning to set up 20 solar parks of 500 MW ... can't find that tweet.
Problem of land. Massive land required per MW of solar power compared to almost any other means.
Modi's idea of solar park on top of canals is good won't require much land.
 
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Kerala electricity board is checking for a floating platform in their owned hydro powered dams. It is like you get electricity from water as well as solar which is floating at dams.
Now that would be brilliant!
Like the Canal top solar farms. More such innovative places need to be found. Using hundreds and thousands of acres of land (even if it is desert) is highly wasteful in my opinion.
 
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Problem of land. Massive land required per MW of solar power compared to almost any other means.


Problem is not a issue in north with Rajasthan and Gujarat.

In south it has to be rural Andra and South Tamilnadu arid zones. Even places with windmill power generators can be used.
 
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Problem of land. Massive land required per MW of solar power compared to almost any other means.


What about decentralized power generation ie rooftop solar power generation?
 
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Solar power is a good idea but not over huge water bodies. It does make a difference in the temperature and rain fall which is a balancing force for temperatures. Deserts are a much better bet and rooftops of cities with local consumers being able to sell back electricity to the grid.
 
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Photovoltaics are a thing of the past. Concentrated solar power is the future, U.S just added 375 MW of CSP last year, more solar tower and parabolic trough based projects are scheduled for next year. It also means a boom for HTF suppliers, CSP guzzles massive quantities of HTF's
 
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Photovoltaics are a thing of the past. Concentrated solar power is the future, U.S just added 375 MW of CSP last year, more solar tower and parabolic trough based projects are scheduled for next year. It also means a boom for HTF suppliers, CSP guzzles massive quantities of HTF's

What is that? Please post some photos.
 
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What is that? Please post some photos.
Remember people used to day how expensive solar power is and cant be commercialized? It was true in case of solar energy produced from photovoltaic cells (CPV). The principle was to use sunlight to eject electrons in a semiconductor (photoelectric effect) which is stored in the cell. The problem in commercialization is that one has to use large volumes of semiconductors which is very expensive.

Concentrated solar power (CSP) uses a simple principle used by Archimedes some 2500 years back to burn Roman ships. Install parabolic mirrors in large quantities in desert areas, which have lots of sunlight all year round and the land is mostly useless anyway, nothing grows there. These mirrors focus/concentrate the sunlight to heat up a heat transfer fluid (HTF) which may be a silicone or a synthetic aromatic liquid or a solid molten salt .

This HTF transfers heat through exchangers to boil water, turn it into steam and run turbines. CSP is now becoming popular in USA and Spain. The client who I am currently working for in a consult assignment, a company named Eastman Chemicals, recently supplied HTF to a CSP facility in Gujarat and they see huuuuge potential in India. More projects are expected to come up in Gujarat+Rajasthan region in the next decade.

This is what a CSP facility looks like:

download.jpg



The tower you see is a solar tower. Same concept, only that it uses a solid HTF, nitrates of sodium or potassium
Rest are parabolic mirrors which use liquid HTF's .

Problem is not a issue in north with Rajasthan and Gujarat.

In south it has to be rural Andra and South Tamilnadu arid zones. Even places with windmill power generators can be used.
Solar and wind in Gujarat+Rajasthan. Bulk of CSP in U.S is in the arid South West.
Tidel+wind in coastal South India. Land acquisition for solar not possible.

Solar power is a good idea but not over huge water bodies. It does make a difference in the temperature and rain fall which is a balancing force for temperatures. Deserts are a much better bet and rooftops of cities with local consumers being able to sell back electricity to the grid.
Eastern Sindh for you guys, lots of potential there, maybe Balochistan too
 
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