Business Standard

As capacity addition tapers off, wind power sector loses steam

After laying off staff, Suzlon Energy asks executives to take pay cuts

- SHREYA JAI New Delhi, 4 January

Wind power tariffs have declined to ~2.43 a unit and capacity addition last year was a mere 435 Mw till October despite three rounds of project auctions, forcing turbine manufactur­ers to rue the surge in installati­ons during 2016-17 when close to 5,000 Mw was added.

Spanish wind energy company Gamesa, which was bought by Siemens last year, said India was responsibl­e for its global sales falling 12 per cent, year on year. “India contribute­d ^626 million in revenues and ^80 million in Ebit (earnings before interest and taxes) in H2 2016 (AprilSepte­mber), and ^44 million in revenues and ^(-)37 million in Ebit in H2 2017,” it said while presenting its results in November.

India’s largest wind turbine maker Suzlon Energy, which laid off workers a few months ago, has now asked its executives to take pay cuts. The company’s order book was likely to remain slim in 2017-18 with no projects coming up, said an analyst.

“With the declining tariffs, cost competitiv­eness and efficiency become key. Cost optimisati­on continues to remain a focus for us. This has enabled us to become lean and agile,” Tulsi Tanti, chairman and managing director, Suzlon Energy, said.

Turbine manufactur­ers estimate unsold inventory of ~100-150 billion despite the auctions of 2017.

Tanti said 2017-18 would be a transition year. “The Indian wind energy industry is shifting to competitiv­e bidding from feed-in tariff. Due to shifts from state to central processes there is a temporary vacuum in the market in this financial year,” he added.

The Centre wants to auction wind energy projects every month but evacuation poses a challenge. Green corridors for evacuating renewable energy were coming up at a steady pace, but states were reluctant to purchase renewable energy, with a few exceptions such as Bihar, Delhi, Goa, Madhya Pradesh, an official said.

Around 3,000 Mw of wind energy projects have been auctioned by the Centre, and the Tamil Nadu and Gujarat government­s. Tariffs fell to ~2.43 a unit from ~3.46 a unit within a year. The earlier feed-in tariff was ~5 per unit.

Inox Wind, which bid ~3.46 a unit in the Centre’s first wind energy auction in February, was trying to sell its older plants, said a person close to the developmen­t. Inox Wind could not be reached for comments.

Recently, one of its contractor­s dragged Inox Wind to the National Company Law Tribunal over ~5 million dues. Though the case was dismissed, Inox Wind’s order book is dry. The company’s income from operations declined by 89 per cent in the second quarter to ~871.5 million from ~8.16 billion in the same period of 2016-17. “We see the wind energy industry to be in the last phase of transition to a complete auction-based regime,” Inox Wind Executive Director Devansh Jain said in a statement to exchanges.

At the same time, IL&FS is selling its entire wind energy portfolio and so is Larsen & Toubro. Private equity-backed firms such as Orange Renewables and Ostro Energy are also looking for buyers for their projects. “The government must make sure that states abide by their renewables purchase obligation­s. Payment security and power offtake has hurt the sector in the past and will continue to do so if states are not obligated to purchase wind power,” said V Subramania­m, secretary-general of the Indian Wind Energy Associatio­n.

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