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In line with its climate change commitments and domestic pollution concerns, India has one of the world’s largest programmes to expand renewables — a tripling of capacity over the next five years.
This is why 1 February, 2018 – the day the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will present its last full budget before the 2019 general elections – is of particular significance to the renewables sector, which comprises electricity from solar, wind, hydro and bio power.
India has missed yearly renewable expansion targets since 2016; no more than 29 percent of the clean energy cess – a major source for funding renewables in the country – has been spent over six years, with Rs 56,700 crore diverted in 2017 to subsidise GST losses; a new import duty on solar modules from China, Taiwan and Malaysia threatens to increase production costs and record low solar tariffs; and the rural poor may miss a renewables job boom, if workforce cannot be trained.
This is enough to replace 175 coal-fired power plants of 1,000 MW and reduce India’s dependence on fossil fuels – 92 percent of India’s electricity comes from fossil fuels – that produce greenhouse gases and hasten global warming.
India installed 62 GW renewable power capacity by November 2017, of which 27 GW, or 43.5 percent, was installed over four years from May 2014.
Consequently, budgetary allocations to renewable energy rose by 38.9 percent between 2014-15 and 2017-18.
By November 2017, renewables constituted 18 percent of India’s installed power capacity of 331 GW, up from 13 percent in 2014, when the BJP government took office.
But over two years to 2017, India missed its ambitious targets substantially.
During 2017-18, 4.8 GW renewables capacity was added till 30 November 2017, against a target of over 14 GW, according to a government release published by the Press Information Bureau (PIB) on 27 December 2017.
India added 11.31 GW of grid-connected power-generation capacity from renewables during 2016-17 against a target of 16.66 GW, which means it fell 32 percent short.
During 2016-17, India added 5.5 GW of wind-power capacity – its largest addition ever – exceeding the target by 38 percent. However, since then till November 2017, India fell short of its target by 88 percent, adding 0.46 GW instead of 4 GW.
Rooftop solar projects are supposed to provide 40 percent (40 GW) of India’s solar target of 100 GW by 2022.
India’s annual domestic manufacturing capacity for solar cells is about 3 GW, or 15 percent of the country’s requirement of 20 GW. A capacity of one watt costs about Rs 62 for India-made solar cells and it costs nearly Rs 25 for Chinese solar cells.
“The duty, if levied, will shoot up (sic) the project cost by about 40 percent, ultimately leading to higher solar power tariffs,” Mudit Jain, senior manager at Bridge to India, a solar consultancy, told the Economic Times on January 9 2018.
“Measures like safeguard duties and anti-dumping duty are protectionist in nature and may not help even the domestic manufacturers in the long run,” he said.
The lowest solar tariff recorded was Rs 2.44 per unit of electricity and Rs 2.64 per unit for wind, compared to Rs 3.20 for coal-fired power.
The National Clean Energy and Environment Fund (NCEEF) was created in 2010-11 using a carbon tax – a clean-energy cess on coal charged to coal producers and importers – to fund clean-energy projects nationwide.
But the fund has not been used as it should have been.
Rs 53,967.23 crore was collected as clean-energy cess over six years to 2016-17. Of this, no more than Rs 15,483.21 crore (28.7 percent) had been transferred to the NCEEF, according to a December 2017 audit report issued by the Comptroller and Auditor General, the government’s auditor.
An additional Rs 29,700 crore should be collected by March 2018, according to government data.
Unspent NCEEF money of Rs 56,700 crore is being diverted to compensate for losses incurred during the rollout of the GST in 2017, revealed a July 2017 response to a right to information (RTI) request filed by the website Scroll.in.
NCEEF has been a major source of funding for the ministry of new and renewable energy (MNRE) since 2011. In the budget for 2017-18, 97.6% of the MNRE’s budget came from the NCEEF.
In the absence of the NCEEF fund, budget 2018-19 will reveal how India intends to fund its renewable-energy drive.
India wants to provide electricity to 240 million people without grid power, improve the quality of electricity supply and boost per capita energy consumption, which at 1,075 kwh (2015-16) is a third of the global average.
Energy subsidies play a major role in achieving these goals, as IndiaSpend reported on 8 January 2018, and will determine not just future power choices but pollution trends as well.
While India declares it wants to increase the share of renewables, the greatest chunk of energy subsidies still favour fossil fuels, according to a 2017 study by the International Institute of Sustainable Development (IISD) and the Overseas Development Institute, both think tanks, and ICF India, a consultancy.
No more than 6.9 percent of India’s Rs 1.35 lakh crore energy subsidies for 2015-16 went to renewables.
“The government should also take care that the prices of fossil fuels including kerosene and LPG are competitively determined and level playing field being created for renewables,” Vibhuti Garg, associate, IISD, and co-author of the report told IndiaSpend.
Many training programmes are in urban centers, which makes it difficult for the rural poor to enroll. Housework, childcare and social norms make it nearly impossible for women to join training programmes. Even if they overcome all these challenges, the curricula of training institutes do not often align with industry needs, we reported.
Apart from addressing these challenges, some may need budgetary attention.
(The story was originally published on India Spend and has been republished with permission.)
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