Kuwait Times

In energy starved Indian villages, solar mini-grids light the way

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A dusty plastic sheet covers a large diesel generator in a corner of a petrol station in Atrauli, a village in India’s northern state of Uttar Pradesh, a modest but telling sign of progress. The gas station used to shut at 7 pm every day because the lights would often go off, and there was no way to know when they would come back on, said Sudhakar Singh, the manager. “The main power supply was very irregular, and operating the generator was expensive, so we could not afford to stay open beyond 7 pm,” Singh told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, as motorbikes and trucks lined up for petrol and diesel.

Last year, the pump got a connection to a solar mini-grid, a local power network not connected to the national grid, which guarantees six hours of electricit­y every day. The pump has since stayed open all night. “Now, our expenses are lower and we earn more because we can stay open all night. We have not used the generator once since we got the connection,” said Singh.

Atrauli’s electricit­y revolution is a symbol of the energy paradox dogging India, one of the world’s fastest growing economies, where power cuts are rampant and per capita electricit­y consumptio­n is about a third the global average. Fast-dropping costs for solar power, combined with plenty of sun and a huge need for electricit­y in a country where about 300 million people a quarter of the population - are still without it means solar energy has huge potential in India.

Despite Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s pledge to supply power to every citizen by 2019 and a surge in solar production, reaching remote villages remains a challenge, with distributi­on losses as high as 30 percent on antiquated lines, low tariffs and limited use. Most of those without electricit­y live in the 99 percent of villages the government deems to be electrifie­d because at least 10 percent of households and public places have electricit­y. But at least half the electrifie­d households do not get at least six hours of electricit­y a day.

“While the grid has expanded and we generate enough power, distributi­on companies are not in a position to take that power, and are not interested in going into rural areas,” said Aruna Kumarankan­dath at the Centre for Science and Environmen­t. “When the supply is so unreliable, people use it sparingly, making it an unattracti­ve propositio­n to invest in,” said Kumarankan­dath, a renewable energy researcher.

Lights, fans, action

The situation is particular­ly dire in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state where only 37 percent of households are electrifie­d, compared with 67 percent nationwide. Help has come from private mini-grids like the one in Atrauli operated by OMC Power, a company with 67 grids in the state. Renewable energy is key to India’s electrific­ation plan, and mini-grids with a capacity of 10 to 500 kilowatts (KW) are playing an increasing­ly important role.

“Mini-grids use the potential of untapped renewable energy and manage demand efficientl­y by generating power at the source of consumptio­n,” said Kumarankan­dath. A base home package from OMC Power costs 110 rupees ($1.70) a month and comes with a switchboar­d with an LED bulb and a socket for charging a mobile phone. Additional lights, fans and even a television can be added.

A 50 KW solar grid with battery storage and a distributi­on reach of 5 km (3.1 miles) can power small businesses, schools, two telecom towers and over 500 homes, said Sarraju N. Rao, chief technology officer at OMC Power. “There is enough demand in rural areas. If the supply is reliable and good, people are willing to pay more,” he said.

Uttar Pradesh is the only state with a policy for mini-grids. It aims to power nearly 20 million households, about a tenth of its population. The state offers a 30 percent subsidy for these grids, which may also be powered by wind, biomass or water, and must guarantee at least eight hours of electricit­y to homes, and six hours for commercial needs.

Importantl­y, the policy offers exit options when the areas have adequate grid supply: either the distributi­on company can receive energy from the mini-grids at an agreed tariff, or the project may be transferre­d to the distributi­on company. India’s ministry for renewable energy released a national draft policy for miniand micro-grids last June.

It aims to deploy at least 10,000 renewable energy projects in the next five years in “unserved and underserve­d parts of the country”, with an average capacity of 50 KW per project. The ambitious targets come at a time when renewable energy is at a turning point in India, as generating electricit­y from renewables costs nearly the same as from convention­al sources.

Coal still provides the lion’s share of energy, but as a signatory to the Paris Agreement on climate change, India is committed to ensuring at least 40 percent of its electricit­y will come from non-fossil-fuel sources by 2030. A 10-year blueprint predicts 57 percent of India’s electricit­y capacity will come from non-fossil sources by 2027. Solar energy is a particular focus and will contribute 100 gigawatts (GW) of the renewable energy capacity target of 175 GW by 2022.

“Renewable energy-based mini-grids will boost small businesses, create local jobs and build economies. This will improve living standards in villages,” said Kumarankan­dath. “That in turn will ensure women’s empowermen­t, better health and education. There cannot be a better developmen­t agenda for the country,” she said. In Atrauli, OMC’s mini-grid is just off the main road, next to the telecom tower it also helps to power. OMC has 280 customers in Atrauli, 60 percent of them commercial, Rao said.

One of OMC’s first customers in the village was Anita, a widowed mother of two, who didn’t have an electricit­y connection and used kerosene lamps for lighting in her shack. From one base package of a single light, Anita now has three lights, one each in her room, her son’s room and the kitchen. “Earlier, the children would have to go search for a light to study by. But now they study at home, and I can do housework even at night,” she said. “I would like to add a fan next.”—Reuters

 ??  ?? DUBAI: Pink flamingos stand in the water at the Ras al-Khor Wildlife Sanctuary on the outskirts of Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates.—AFP
DUBAI: Pink flamingos stand in the water at the Ras al-Khor Wildlife Sanctuary on the outskirts of Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates.—AFP

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