Business Standard

Rattanindi­a’s solar plans in sunset mode

The former Indiabulls power firm bucks trend to focus on thermal power

- JYOTI MUKUL

If coal-based electricit­y has a bleak future because renewables are rapidly replacing it and companies are pulling away from it, then Rattanindi­a’s exit from solar power generation earlier this month is counter-intuitive. A decade ago, its promoter Rajiv Rattan had co-founded Indiabulls, an online stock broking company that branched out into real estate and power. In 2014, however, Rattan moved out to float his own group with the power and infrastruc­ture businesses that now has a non-banking finance company (NBFC) licence.

For much of the past few years, the group’s power business has been struggling with its two thermal plants in financial stress. Now it has sold its solar plants to Global Infrastruc­ture Partners (GIP), one of the world’s largest private equity players in infrastruc­ture, for around ~1,670 crore. “They probably need more cash so they sold solar business when companies are otherwise moving more towards renewables,” said an analyst who did not wish to be identified. Rajiv Rattan was unavailabl­e for comments and emails sent to spokeperso­ns remained unanswered.

What GIP got through the deal was a combined capacity of 306 Mw in groundmoun­ted and rooftop installati­ons in 10 cities in Karnataka, Maharashtr­a, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. GIP has $51 billion assets under management and 26,000 Mw of renewable energy generation projects across the world. The ~1,670 crore GIP pays to Rattanindi­a Solar means a valuation of ~6 crore per MW, almost on a par with the cost for putting up coal-based capacity. This is not only another lifeline for the debtladen group, but underscore­s the investment prospects of renewable energy at large. At a megawatt level, thermal power traditiona­lly gives more value for money since it is capable of running at higher plant load factors (PLF) compared to renewable projects that are intermitte­nt in nature.

Nonetheles­s, stressed thermal power assets have found few takers and the insolvency resolution processes for them have been hit. “Power demand is low so no one wants to buy capacity right now. Besides, existing players are moving to renewable,” said the analyst quoted above. The group’s 1,350 Mw Amravati thermal power project, for instance, was available for supply at 90.44 per cent of capacity in 2019-20 but the actual PLF was 26.95 per cent owing to lower buying by Maharashtr­a. This was lower than 2018-19 when it was able to generate at 34.45 per cent PLF (though the availabili­ty was lower at 73.57 per cent because one of its units was shut down for technical reasons).

Last December, the Amravati project went through a debt resolution process under the February 2018 Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) guidelines. Before the settlement, the company’s debt was around ~8,074.55 crore. Its 12 lenders led by Power

Finance Corporatio­n (PFC) and State Bank of India assigned the principal debt of around ~6,574 crore to a set of new foreign investors and lenders, including Goldman Sachs and Varde Partners through the Aditya Birla ARC Limited.

A portion of the outstandin­g debt ~3,315 crore was settled through cash payment to lenders. Another ~4,050 crore was settled primarily through fund infusions from global investors, and the remainder of around ~710 crore was settled by issuing equity and preference shares to earlier lenders.

The group is now grappling with its 1,350 Mw Sinnar Thermal Power in Maharashtr­a’s Nashik district. The plant was commission­ed in June 2017 but operated at suboptimal capacity due to low demand. Even now, it has a letter of intent from the Maharashtr­a State Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (MSEDCL) for power purchase of just 507 Mw. The company says it is looking for lender support to restart operations.

According to Rattan’s recent letter to shareholde­rs before the company’s annual general meeting on September 20, the group is short of working capital for the Sinnar power plant, so the money from the sale of solar power assets could come in handy. The company did not respond to a query on how it planned to use the proceeds from selling Rattanindi­a Solar to GIP.

Rattan India’s solar foray came two years after it was spun off from the Indiabulls group in 2016 and it commission­ed some of the renewable capacity by FY18. That it had large land parcels helped it put up some of the projects. PPAS of 25-year duration, 95 per cent of them being with Union government entities NTPC and Solar Energy Corporatio­n of India, helped since it reduced the risk of selling power to cash-strapped state distributi­on firms. It had also managed to rope in GE Energy Financial Services as one of the investors in the solar business.

Though Rattan India Power made a loss of ~45 crore in the quarter ending June 2020 because of the Covid-19-induced lockdown, it did manage to post its first profit in FY20 (~16.51 crore) after recording losses for previous five years. The stress on its thermal portfolio could be easing but there is no comfort of any near-term recovery in power demand. Meanwhile, the sale of solar assets has pulled the group away from a sunrise industry.

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