Business Standard

Low solar power rates to boost equipment import

- AMRITHA PILLAY Mumbai, 12 May

With solar power bidding rates touching a new low of ~2.44 a unit this week, sector experts say there will be a problem for equipment makers.

“The current bids are not viable if one was to consider the true cost of manufactur­ing, even for Chinese imports. These bids are also forward looking, with an expectatio­n that solar panel prices globally will fall further,” said Santosh Kamath, partner at consultanc­y KPMG India.

Over 80 per cent of India’s solar equipment requiremen­ts are met through import and Vimal Kejriwal, managing director at KEC Internatio­nal (into power transmissi­on engineerin­g), expects this to continue. “Modules will predominan­tly remain a market dominated by Chinese suppliers, unless there is major growth in the indigenous wafer and cell manufactur­ing industry. Structures and trackers are largely sourced from Indian players today and likely to remain that way. The balance systems equipment will be dominated by multinatio­nal companies, with last-mile assembling and/or localisati­on in India,” he said.

According to a CARE Ratings report, as of December 2016, domestic solar cell making capacity was 1,450 Mw annually; total solar capacity addition in 2016-17 was 5,526 Mw. “Domestic manufactur­ers are yet to establish their competitiv­eness vis-avis the imported solar cells, panels and modules,” the report said.

Withdrawal of domestic content requiremen­t rules and reduction in indirect taxes on import of solar cells has further dampened the prospects for domestic sourcing.

Power Minister Piyush Goyal, earlier this week, stated the government would promote indigenous manufactur­ing of high quality solar equipment. However, falling supply rates isn't in line with the cost of production.

Even if one discounts oversupply-driven price dynamics in China and their subsidies, Indian manufactur­ers face a handicap of 25-30 per cent to Chinese manufactur­ers. Indian manufactur­ers are not able to compete due to lack of scale, Chinese subsidies and aggressive pricing due to oversupply in global markets,” Kamath from KPMG added.

“Highly subsidised imported panels are a serious threat to the ambitious target of 100 Gw of solar energy by 2022. The government should explore ways to create and maintain a level playing field. However, since solar is a sunrise industry globally, there is ample scope for export and quality solar panels always find a market,” said Ashish Khanna, chief executive officer, Tata Power Solar.

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