Business Standard

‘Lego-like’ solar and driver-less cars

A huge transition is underway in electricit­y, transport and green finance

- VANDANA GOMBAR The author is editor, global policy for BloombergN­EF vgombar@bloomberg.net

The electricit­y sector in the world, and in India, looks very different than it did a decade ago, with solar and wind farms — big ones and tiny ones — pumping power to homes and factories. A fuel transition is also underway in the transporta­tion sector, as is automation. As many as 61 companies are testing autonomous driverless cars in California, while the number of testers in China went up to 35 at the end of last month, according to BloombergN­EF (BNEF). To track the transition in electricit­y, transport and green finance, here are four things to keep track of this year:

Solar and wind power: New solar installati­ons globally last year were close to 110 gigawatts, and may set another record by crossing 125 gigawatts this year, according to early estimates from BNEF. Solar panels have become “Legolike”, according to the principal economist at the Beijing-headquarte­red Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank, Jang Ping Thia. The panels are being installed on the ground, on rooftops and floated on water bodies to quietly generate power across the world.

In the wind sector, almost 54 gigawatts of new wind farms were added globally last year, and the projected addition for the current year is 70 gigawatts, with over 10 per cent of that offshore. India is taking its first steps to install offshore wind, with a tender likely to be issued in the first half of the current year.

Sustainabi­lity- linked loans, also known as ESG-linked loans, provide benefits to the borrower if specific environmen­t, social or governance metrics are satisfied. The loans need not necessaril­y be earmarked for green projects, as is the case, for instance, with the proceeds of green bonds. According to the latest data from BNEF, sustainabi­lity-linked loans jumped 677 per cent to $36.4 billion in 2018. Singapore’s real estate developer CapitaLand was among the companies that secured a sustainabi­lity-linked loan last year: A S$300 million (USD 222 million) five-year, multi-currency loan from DBS for general corporate purposes. Also in Singapore, agribusine­ss group Wilmar Internatio­nal signed a deal with OCBC Bank where the interest rate was pegged to the company’s sustainabi­lity performanc­e.

Total sustainabi­lity debt finance increased to $247 billion in 2018, with green bonds making up the largest, $182 billion chunk, followed by sustainabi­lity-linked loans. The balance was made up of sustainabi­lity bonds, social bonds and green loans. Expect to hear a lot more about sustainabl­e finance this year, and also about standards like the Green Loan Principles.

Self- driving vehicles, also known as driverless or autonomous vehicles, are moving closer to reality with car manufactur­ing companies, software developers, ride-hailing companies like Uber, and telecom network providers jumping in to secure a piece of the action. Google’s Waymo is widely seen as the leader in this space, with millions of miles driven in testing, and a live pilot underway in Arizona, U.S. BNEF expects much more activity in this space in 2019 in the U.S. and in China, where as many as 15 cities have allowed public road testing of autonomous cars. In India, the Mahindra Group has already demonstrat­ed a self-driving tractor. This “will open up entirely new possibilit­ies in farming”, according to Anand Mahindra, chairman of the group.

Electric vehicles and oil displaceme­nt: Worldwide, there are over 5 million electric vehicles on the road (including buses and other commercial vehicles), with a good number running on China’s roads, as well as on thoroughfa­res in Europe and the U.S. It is possible that the sales of convention­al internal combustion engine or ICE vehicles may have already peaked. Even if that is not quite the case yet, restrictio­ns on the purchase of such vehicles are being imposed or mooted in several cities globally to manage pollution and congestion. This has impacted oil consumptio­n and demand. BNEF will be announcing its 2018 estimates for oil displaceme­nt by electric vehicles later this quarter. In India, electric buses are already plying their trade in many cities, and they are set to increase in number this year. In terms of total cost of ownership, electric buses tend to be cheaper, though the upfront costs are higher than a diesel vehicle. Organising charging infrastruc­ture for electric buses is also less of a challenge.

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