Transmission firms eye ₹20K-cr gain from solar boost
NEWDELHI:The government’s decision last month to double solar park capacity to 40,000 mega watt (MW) in three years has opened up a new business opportunity worth up to ₹20,000 crore for transmission companies.
Adding new 50 ultra-mega solar parks to the 34 under construction in 21 states, as decided by the Cabinet on February 22, will need to significantly widen the green energy corridor — the transmission network for the solar parks — an official at Solar Energy Corp of India, a stateowned company in charge of implementing various solar power projects, said.
The ongoing ₹13,000-crore green energy corridor-II project connecting the 34 parks under construction and new transmission projects will be identified keeping in mind the location of the new parks, said the official, requesting anonymity.
Transmission networks within the state where projects come up will be assigned to transmission utilities by the states, while inter-state projects will be assigned by the central government. Since construction of solar parks takes way less time than setting up a transmission corridor, transmission projects that need quick execution will be assigned to central or state transmission firms, while those for power plants that will come up at a later stage are likely to be auctioned as it affords sufficient time for a tariff-based bidding, an official in the power ministry said requesting anonymity.
According to IS Jha, chairman and MD of Power Grid Corp, which prepared the roadmap for the green energy corridor-II, not all the proposed new solar parks may come up at new locations and many could be in the solar and land resource rich states such as Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Gujarat where such parks are underway.
“The required additional transmission capacity may be a mix of inter-state and intra-state. In the case of a new solar park, the cost of transmission comes to ₹50 lakh to ₹1 crore per mega watt depending on the location.”
Under the green energy corridor project-II, 32 transmission projects — ₹8,041 crore of interstate networks and ₹4,745 crore of intra-state network — are being constructed.
Under the original 100 gigawatt (GW) solar capacity addition plan, 20 GW was to come from solar parks, which needed highend transmission network and 40GW each from roof top projects and distributed power projects. This has now been recalibrated to provide for 40GW of solar park capacity.
According to Reji Kumar Pillai, president and CEO of India Smart Grid Forum, a public- private partnership of the power ministry, the challenge of integrating renewable energy into the gird is in the roof-top segment.