Khaleej Times

Indian solar panel makers feel the heat from Chinese rivals

- Krishna N. Das and Sudarshan Varadhans

new delhi — Some of India’s biggest solar equipment makers are facing financial collapse, priced out by Chinese competitor­s as Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government prioritise­s cheap power over local manufactur­ing despite his ‘Make in India’ push.

Though President Donald Trump is pulling the United States out of the Paris accord on climate change, India is sticking to its huge renewable energy programme. That has created a multi-billion-dollar market for Chinese solar product makers, who are facing an overcapaci­ty at home and steep duties in Europe.

India’s solar power generation capacity has already more than tripled in three years to over 12 gigawatt (GW) as Modi targets raising energy generation from all renewable sources to 175GW by 2022.

Chinese companies have gained the most from that increase, accounting for around 85 per cent of India’s solar module demand and earning around $2 billion, according to industry data. The total annual market could jump to more than $10 billion in the next few years going by the government’s capacity targets.

Local companies such as Jupiter Solar, Indosolar and Moser Baer India, however, are struggling to win contracts.

WTO order

Orders funnelled through a domestic content policy have all but dried up after the World Trade Organisati­on last September upheld an earlier ruling that found the move violated global trade norms.

As a result, Jupiter said it could shut shop by July after delivering their last orders this month; Indosolar auditors have raised doubts over it remaining as a “going concern”; and Moser Baer says it needs support from its lenders to revive its solar business.

Indian solar power plant developers — including companies backed by Japan’s Softbank and Goldman Sachs — are quoting everlower tariffs in auctions to win big projects, encouraged by steep drop in Chinese solar equipment prices.

That is squeezing out Indian cell

The government is busy bringing power prices down but you can’t build castles on graves. Without a domestic manufactur­ing ecosystem, no public policy can last for a long time Gyanesh Chaudhary, CEO of module maker Vikram Solar

and module makers, many of which have inferior technology, depend on imports of raw materials, have limited access to cheap loans and operate below capacity. Chinese modules are 10 to 20 per cent cheaper than those made in India, company and industry executives said.

“The WTO ruling has torpedoed everything. It’s not a case of one company — we have the largest cell operating capacity — everybody below us will shut down one after another,” Jupiter CEO Dhruv Sharma said. Chinese companies were selling solar cells in India at 19 to 20 US cents, around 35 per cent below his production cost, he added.

There are more than 110 Indian solar cell and module makers registered with the government, out of which consultanc­y Bridge to India expects only a handful to survive.

Santosh Vaidya, a senior official in the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, said the government was working on several initiative­s to promote the domestic solar manufactur­ing industry.

India’s promise, and need, as a market for solar is obvious. It is one of the lowest per-capita consumers of electricit­y in the world and more than 200 million of its people are still not connected to the grid, making it crucial for the government to aggressive­ly push for cheap power.

Despite its low labour costs, it is not alone in buckling under pressure from Chinese competitio­n. Earlier this month, Germany’s SolarWorld, once Europe’s largest solar panel maker, said it would file for insolvency.

Indian companies produced an estimated 1.33GW of modules last year out of the total capacity of 5.29GW, according to Bridge to India. Total consumptio­n of modules — 60 per cent of a solar project’s cost — was around 4GW.

Government discussion­s

Solar project developer SB Energy, a joint venture between SoftBank, Taiwan’s Foxconn and India’s Bharti Enterprise­s, said it had discussed the shortage of local manufactur­ing with the government.

“Lack of significan­t domestic solar manufactur­ing capacity is a concern, as this is a major gap,” SB Energy executive chairman Manoj Kohli said, drawing a parallel with India’s huge mobile phone market but negligible local production.

Several company executives said a lack of scale, absence of raw material supply chains and rapidly changing technology were some of other reasons Indian firms were unable to compete with Chinese manufactur­ers such as Trina Solar and Yingli.

“The government is busy bringing power prices down but you can’t build castles on graves,” Gyanesh Chaudhary, CEO of module maker Vikram Solar told Reuters. “Without a domestic manufactur­ing ecosystem, no public policy can last for a long time.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? An employee works at a solar cell production line at a Jupiter Solar Power Limited plant in Baddi, in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh.
— Reuters An employee works at a solar cell production line at a Jupiter Solar Power Limited plant in Baddi, in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh.

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