Business Standard

Gujarat halts solar pump tender after taking advance from farmers STORY IN NUMBERS

Puts business of 25 SMEs & ~200-cr project in jeopardy

- SHREYA JAI

The Gujarat government has halted its solar pump programme after making headway in both procuremen­t and distributi­on, it is learnt.

In January, the state government came up with a tender for 5,000 solar-powered agricultur­e pumps worth ~200 crore. Around 25 small & medium enterprise­s (SMEs) were awarded the contracts. Ten per cent of the cost of each pump was also collected from 7,500 farmers as guarantee money. The state government even wrote multiple letters to contractor­s to expedite the work.

Now six months later, in its communicat­ion with contractor­s and discoms, the state government has confessed its inability to fund the programme, saying funds from the Union ministry of new and renewable energy (MNRE) are not adequate. Executives at the contractor firms claim the Gujarat government removed the criteria in the tender to get any funding from the MNRE.

While the farmers are upset, SMEs who were banking on this large contract are in the soup with orders in the backyard and no takers. One of them is learnt to have even threatened suicide in a communicat­ion to the state authoritie­s.

Other contractor­s are caught between queries from the farmers and inaction from the government department. While 10 per cent of the cost was collected from farmers, the remaining was to be financed by the state or Centre. A typical solar pump costs ~3.5 lakh, the executives said.

Barely six months ago, the Gujarat Urja Vikas Nigam Limited (GUVNL) had directed the five state-owned power distributi­on companies to call for tenders to install solar water pumping systems. Cumulative­ly 5,457 pumps were directed to be installed in different areas under the jurisdicti­on of the respective discoms. In July, GUVNL wrote to managing directors of all the discoms asking for “abeyance of the project”.

“MNRE has sanctioned central finance assistance of ~46.25 crore towards installati­on of 5,000 solar pumps against proposal of 10,309 solar pumps. The sanction is subject to fulfilment of certain conditions. Since there are difference­s in conditions specified by the MNRE, and scheme implementa­tion by GUVNL, the competent authority has decided to put further activity of the tender in abeyance till further instructio­n,” said the letter, reviewed by Business Standard. A similar letter was sent by the discoms to all contractor­s.

A GUVNL spokespers­on did not respond to a message seeking official comment. The MNRE secretary could not be reached, despite several attempts.

The contractor­s claim they are under pressure, as farmers are directing their queries to them, having submitted an initial amount. “No contract is sacred if the government backs out and it belittles their all efforts and contracts. All the contractor­s have placed the orders and will suffer losses if this project doesn’t go through,” said one contractor.

While most contractor­s are looking at a major loss, some are worried about their loss of credibilit­y. Among the 25 contractor­s, most are local SMEs active in water and energy solutions, while and one is a major Delhi player in the solar off-grid space. The Gujarat government had proposed installing solar pumps for the 400,000 farmers without any power connection. The state has installed close to 20,000 pumps till date. In January 2017, the government came out with the tender for 5,000 solar agricultur­e pumps worth ~200 crore 25 SMEs were awarded the contracts 10% of the cost of each pump was also collected from 7,500 farmers as guarantee money The remaining was to be financed by the state or the Centre A typical solar pump costs ~3.5 lakh, executives said The state government even wrote multiple letters to contractor­s to expedite the work

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