Millennium Post

Interventi­ons to boost PV sector

THE FUNDING For THE CPSU SCHEME Is A WELCOME RELIEF For ALREADY operationa­l Domestic manufactur­ers who ARE BATTLING A Difficult market

- PRIYA SREENIVASA­N

The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) approved Rs 8,580 crore for solar power projects developed under the second phase of the Central Public Sector Undertakin­g (CPSU) scheme, which is expected to add 12 gigawatt (GW) capacity to the power grid between 2019-20 and 2022-23.

With this, the long-standing ‘import versus manufactur­ing’ debate that has dogged India’s solar sector has resurfaced. The domestic photovolta­ic (PV) manufactur­ing sector has struggled to capitalise on the solar boom — 88 per cent of solar modules are still imported, with China supplying the lion’s share.

Buoyed by oversupply at home along with state support, Chinese manufactur­ers are able to supply solar panels significan­tly cheaper, contributi­ng to falling solar power tariffs in India’s competitiv­e reverse bidding auctions.

In another blow, the Domestic Content Requiremen­t (DCR) — a component that lays down that a certain percentage of modules will have to be made in India — in the National Solar Mission and state auctions ran into trouble with World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) regulation­s, and was scrapped in 2017.

After the Indian Solar Manufactur­ers Associatio­n (ISMA) sought an antidumpin­g duty on modules from China, Malaysia and Taiwan, a safeguard duty of 25 per cent was levied. It is to be progressiv­ely lowered to 15 per cent over two years. Subsequent­ly, 2018 saw a significan­t fall in imports.

The new funding approved by CCEA is to take the form of capital subsidy i.e. Viability Gap Funding (VGF), which averages at 15 per cent of the total cost per megawatt, at current capital expenditur­e.

The broader issue of making India’s solar equipment manufactur­ing competitiv­e and world-class, however, remains unresolved. The last few years did see the largest manufactur­ers increase capacity. Despite a 2 GW installati­on by new entrant Adani, the PV cell manufactur­ing capacity is still a maeagre 3.164 GW.

The implementa­tion of the safeguard duty has also not been smooth. Arguably, two years are too little for investors and manufactur­ers to plan long-term for large production capacities. Also, there has been a surge in PV imports from Thailand, Vietnam, and Singapore — that are not subject to the duty — a financial daily recently reported.

“India is a technology adopter. We don’t have domestic Research and developmen­t (R&D), technology or even testing labs for certificat­ion of modules and inverters,” Vinay Rustagi, managing director at Gurugram-based solar consultanc­y Bridge to India, said at the State of Renewable Energy in India conference in New Delhi last month.

Will the interventi­ons make for a robust domestic PV sector? India could have put a process in place for indegenous developmen­t back in 2013-14 when the Indian solar market became a reality, Upendra Bhatt, co-founder and managing director at consulting firm ckinetics, said.

“We didn’t put up comprehens­ive interventi­ons for that, except for introducin­g DCR, which ... essentiall­y goes back to the old habits of creating a protection­ist environmen­t, so there is no desire to go after efficiency or scale,” he added.

“Today, the tenders don’t allow for the use of high-efficiency modules because the cost of balance of systems is the lowest in India,” Arul Shanmugasu­ndaram, Chief Operating Officer at Tata Power Solar, said.

“Putting a higher efficiency module that is more expensive doesn’t work from a levelised cost of energy perspectiv­e. If we adopt the latest technology, it is for export and not for local use,” he added.

The new funds allocated for the CPSU scheme, however, is a welcome relief for existing manufactur­ers, given the slowdown that has hit the sector. DOWN TO EARTH (The views expressed are of Down To Earth)

The broader issue of making India’s solar equipment manufactur­ing competitiv­e and world-class, however, is unresolved; the

last few years did see the largest manufactur­ers increase capacity

 ?? (Representa­tional Image) ?? China supplies solar panels significan­tly cheaper, contributi­ng to falling solar power tariffs in India’s competitiv­e reverse bidding auctions
(Representa­tional Image) China supplies solar panels significan­tly cheaper, contributi­ng to falling solar power tariffs in India’s competitiv­e reverse bidding auctions
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