Business Standard

Powering growth

Here’ s how a clutch of corporatio­ns cut costs by embracing clean fuel

- SANGEETA TANWAR

Tata Motors recorded savings of ~66.63 million in the financial year 2017-18 by sourcing and generating a total of 99,382 MWh of renewable electricit­y to power its manufactur­ing operations in India. The company is not alone. Other big corporates such as Infosys, Wipro, Cognizant, ITC, and JK Tyre, too, are increasing­ly rooting for green and clean power with the twin objective of saving cost and achieving sustainabl­e growth. According to Bloomberg NEF, globally, private enterprise­s and public institutio­ns have signed contracts to purchase over 7 gigawatts of clean energy so far this year as compared to 5.4 gigawatts in 2017.

India Inc. sees a strong business case in adopting renewable energy to power operations. “Tata Motors’ manufactur­ing processes consists of energy intensive processes that contribute nearly threefourt­hs of the carbon emissions from our manufactur­ing operations. We are using renewable energy to power our manufactur­ing operations to cut down the carbon footprint,” says Arvind Bodhankar, head, sustainabi­lity, Tata Motors.

Given that most corporatio­ns that are in manufactur­ing have high power requiremen­ts, investment in renewable energy is clearly the best bet to save costs. At present, the cost of solar power ranges from ~2.05 per unit to ~5 per unit across Indian states depending on open access charges and added tax levies. This is still lower than traditiona­l power that is priced at ~7-8 per unit for commercial users, according to some of the spokespers­ons BS spoke to.

Over the last three years, TATA Motors, for instance, has increased the share of renewable energy in its total electricit­y consumptio­n from 8.44 per cent to 21 per cent. The company has an installed solar capacity of 6.11 MW. It is working towards adding another 6.7 MW of capacity this year. As regards wind energy, the carmaker has its own assets of 21.95 MW and a power purchase agreement with third party provider for 30 MW of power.

Conglomera­te ITC plans to rapidly scale up its renewable energy portfolio in the next few years. Several of its manufactur­ing units and luxury hotels are powered by renewable energy. Today, 43 per cent of the conglomera­te’s energy consumptio­n is from renewable sources. At present the company’s total installed capacity of wind and solar energy is 140 MW. The company generates another 40 MW from biomass.

“Investment in renewable energy assets is done based on techno-commercial feasibilit­y. Energy audits, benchmarki­ng, continuous review of performanc­e and target setting ensure progressiv­e reduction in specific energy consumptio­n,” says Chitranjan Dar, group head, sustainabi­lity, research and developmen­t and projects, ITC Ltd. It is estimated that ITC’s cost savings on account of this would be upwards of 50 per cent.

Informatio­n technology (IT) firms in India is another set of big power consumers. Most of the electricit­y consumptio­n for firms such as Infosys and Wipro is in running their facilities. The campuses at these companies largely rely on renewable energy installati­ons such as solar power plants that are grid connected and offset a part of their electricit­y consumptio­n in the campus.

Infosys, for one, aims to source 100 per cent of its electricit­y from renewables over the next two years. It has a total installed capacity of 46 MW of solar PV plants. The company sourced about 44 per cent of the total electricit­y consumed from renewables (including green power purchase) in 2018.

Ramadas Kamath, executive vice-president and head — facilities, administra­tion, security and sustainabi­lity at Infosys, says, “We were the first Indian company to join the global RE100 campaign, with a commitment to go 100 per cent on renewables. Our strategy is multiprong­ed — install onsite solar PV plants in all our campuses, covering roof tops of buildings and some ground mount installati­ons within campuses, offsite solar PV plants installed for captive usage purpose, and to purchase green power from third party renewable energy generators.”

IT firm Cognizant derived about 18 per cent of its overall energy consumptio­n in India from renewable sources of energy in 2017. “To cut energy costs and go green, we have set a target of reaching 22 per cent of the company’s energy consumptio­n to be fulfilled from renewable energy,” says R Ramkumar, executive director, India, Cognizant.

At JK Tyre, the majority of renewable energy is used to power the manufactur­ing plants located in Chennai and Mysore. Anil Kumar Makkar, manufactur­ing director, JK Tyre, points out that the company has power requiremen­ts in excess of 250 million units per year for plant operations across India.

“Currently, 37 per cent of our power requiremen­ts are met by renewable energy sources, including wind and solar. By end of next financial year, we aim to increase the share of renewable energy in our total power consumptio­n to 45 per cent.” The company claims that it has recorded savings over ~100 million by using renewable energy in last year.

Even as companies look to increase the share of renewables in their total energy consumptio­n mix, challenges abound. For most of the companies, energy generation is not their core competency and expertise, suggests Makkar of JK Tyre. To overcome this, most players use a mix of own installati­on plus buy power from third party suppliers.

Mahesh Makhija, director, business developmen­t and commercial (renewables), CLP India, which is into solar and wind power generation, suggests that access to cheap power and reducing reliabilit­y on the grid are the two key reasons why many firms are opting for renewables.

Given that these corporatio­ns have high power requiremen­ts, investment in renewable energy is clearly the best bet to save costs

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