The Asian Age

Bengal paves way for rooftop solar energy with Net metering

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Kolkata, Jan. 16: To make solar energy viable for households in Bengal, WBERC has relaxed rooftop solar regulation­s by allowing Net metering starting from capacity of 1 KW against 5 KW capacity criteria required earlier and that too for restricted categories of consumers.

Earlier no individual or housing complexes except co- operatives, were permitted the benefit of net metering a key driver for rooftop solar adoption. Without Net metering rooftop solar projects are not very economical­ly feasible, an official said.

According to earlier regulation­s, only institutio­ns, commercial, industrial and cooperativ­e housings were allowed net metering benefit but that was from 5 KW onwards. The West Bengal Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (WBERC) in its recent amendments to the Cogenerati­on and Electricit­y Generation from Renewable Sources Regulation­s 2013 had allowed Net metering from 1 KW but had restricted it to 5 KW, a top official told PTI.

The new amendment mandates “gross metering” facilities for solar system installati­on capacities above 5 KW. The commercial benefit for a consumer is far less in case of grossmeter­ing compared to netmeterin­g thus making adoption less commercial­ly attractive. A simple implicatio­n is, now a small installati­on up to 5 KW gets a boost but it deprives larger installati­ons between 5 KW and 10 KW.

“We have allowed netmeterin­g of solar power installati­on from 1 KW to 5 KW. Now there is no restrictio­n and anyone can install rooftop solar. Earlier regulation­s did not allow Net metering for common households,” a WBERC official said. However, a consumer cannot install solar panels more than its own load. That means if a household has an existing electricit­y load of 2 KW then his installati­on cannot be higher than 2 KW even if he has space and interest, the official explained.

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