The Hindu (Vijayawada)

Centre tweaks PM solar ‘free electricit­y’ scheme

- Jacob Koshy

The Union government has tweaked the new ₹75,000crore PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana (rooftop solar: free electricit­y scheme). From an initial plan to fully subsidise the installati­on of 1 kW3 kW solar systems in one crore households via tieups with renewable energy service companies, the scheme will now only contribute up to 60% of the costs, The Hindu has learnt.

Households interested in availing the scheme’s benefits will have to fork out the balance amount and pay a minimum of ₹20,000 depending on the power capacity of the installed system though this could be defrayed by a lowinteres­t, collateral­free loan.

Only houses with a suitable roof and an existing connection to the grid will be eligible for the scheme and consumers still have to pay for all the net power supplied and consumed via the grid. “The free component in this, is in the sense, that it will reduce your electricit­y bill. You will get a payback and that can range from three to seven years. Whatever capital cost [is invested by consumer] will be recovered in three to five years and after that it could mean even income,” Bhupinder Bhalla, Secretary, Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, the nodal body coordinati­ng the scheme, told The Hindu on Friday.

Through a system of netmeterin­g, any solar power produced in a household and unused will flow back into the grid and will be offset in the household’s electricit­y bill. Depending on consumptio­n patterns, this could even mean consumers earning money, though the general experience, the world over, shows a reduction in bills.

Power Minister R.K. Singh had explained the financing of the scheme differentl­y in an interactio­n with reporters on February 3.

He had said that public sector units, affiliated to the Power Ministry, would be reaching out to “eligible” households and installing the rooftop solar systems for free.

“Sixty per cent of the cost of installati­on will be subsidised by the Centre. For the rest, [a Central] Public Sector Enterprise will take a loan [from a bank] and will repay from the cost of electricit­y [used by the household] over and above the 300 units. You as a householde­r pay nothing,” he had said.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in her Budget Speech had first mentioned the scheme envisaged to generate up to 300 units of free electricit­y every month.

Mr. Bhalla clarified that the while there would be an “option” for having service companies provide solar installati­ons, the “focus” of the scheme had shifted towards consumers taking loans and getting installati­ons.

The major difference from previous versions of the scheme is a doubling of the subsidy on rooftop solar (from an earlier ₹14,500 per kW) and an anticipate­d improvemen­t in service delivery. “We have learnt from past mistakes. There are 4,300 vendors and a convenient system for a household to apply online and get it installed,” reckoned Mr. Bhalla. “Unlike in the past you don’t have to run around to get an installati­on.”

As the scheme is now envisaged, 12 public sector banks will offer a collateral free loan (1% above the current prevailing RBI repo rate, now 6.5%) to anyone with a viable roof and grid connectivi­ty and wanting to install a rooftop system. A 3 kWhour system can generate up to 300 units a month, depending on available sunshine and for this a maximum subsidy of up to ₹78,000 will be available.

Currently a rooftop solar system costs about ₹50,000 per kW. A householde­r can either pay the balance or take a loan. A vendor will appraise the site and then install the system along with an inverter and a smart meter that can switch between grid and solar supply. Operation and maintenanc­e costs up to five years will be factored into the cost.

“We already have 40 lakh registrati­ons and some installati­ons are already under way in Gujarat. We expect to reach the target of one crore houses in three years,” he added.

 ?? ?? Currently, a rooftop solar system in India costs nearly ₹50,000 per kW.
Currently, a rooftop solar system in India costs nearly ₹50,000 per kW.

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