As India’s second wave of Covid-19 subsided, renewable capacity commissioning began to bounce back. A total of 8.6GW of renewable energy (RE) capacity – 7.6GW of which was solar – was installed in the first seven months of FY2021/22. This is a material uplift compared to year-on-year renewable installs of 5.7GW in FY2019/20 and 2.6GW in FY2020/21.
Investment in the RE sector also picked up significantly during the first seven months of FY2021/22, reaching US$14.2 billion, compared to US$5.1 billion in FY2019/20 and US$1.8 billion in FY2020/21 for the same period.
Solar developers have been making the most of a “duty-free” window to import modules since July 2021, when a two-and-a-half year-long solar anti-dumping duty regime on imported solar cells and modules ended. That window is due to close in April 2022 when a basic customs duty (BCD) of 40% is imposed.
Meanwhile, module prices have gone up due to supply chain constraints on the raw materials for solar module manufacturing. India is looking to build significant domestic module manufacturing capacity to reduce exposure to price volatility from imported modules.
At this rate of solar commissioning, India’s renewable capacity additions could reach ~15GW. Thermal capacity, on the other hand, has seen net negative additions on the grid during the same period, with 2.1GW of coal-fired capacity added versus 2.4GW retired by October 2021.
Investment must ramp up to meet renewable energy targets
India’s climate action pledges received a mixed reaction at COP26. The near-term target for 50% of power capacity from clean energy sources won plaudits, while the lack of a concrete plan to phase out coal power generation capacity left many dissatisfied. However, India has committed to a phase down of coal-fired power plants. This is a big commitment from a developing country with huge ambitions for economic growth and and to meet other social objectives such as energy security and job opportunities.
Given the urgent need to ensure energy security and self-reliance to meet India’s growing electricity demand, the transition to clean energy will be market-driven. And in the long term, renewables, as the least-cost source of electricity, will win the race.
To meet the mega target of 450GW of renewable energy capacity (500GW including large hydro) by 2030, annual capacity installs will have to accelerate to ~35GW. This requires massive investment not only in renewable energy capacity, but also in expansion and modernisation of the transmission and distribution network and important grid firming technologies such as battery and pumped hydro storage.
October 2021 saw big capital movement in India’s renewable energy industry, including the completion of Adani Green Energy’s 100% acquisition of Soft Bank’s SB Energy at US$3.5 billion for a total capacity of ~5GW; the completion of Reliance Industries’ newly formed subsidiary Reliance New Solar Energy’s 100% acquisition of Norway’s top solar cell and module manufacturer REC Solar Holdings; the sanctioning by the Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency (IREDA) of a US$184 million loan to renewable energy developer Vector Green; and Cleantech Solar raising US$26 million in debt from National Infrastructure Investment Fund (NIIF). NIIF is a sovereign wealth fund partly owned by the Government of India and backed by notable Indian banks such as ICICI, HDFC, Axis, Kotak Mahindra.
Retiring expensive coal-fired power capacity
Sustained capital movement into clean energy capacity will crowd out funding for new coal-fired capacity and subsequently lead to the termination of old and expensive coal-fired power plants. In the four years to the end of FY2020/21, a total of 9.2GW of coal-fired capacity was retired from the grid. And we should see this trend continue with an average of 2-3GW of coal capacity retired in the next couple of years.
The enforcement of emission control norms is yet another sword hanging over old coal-fired capacity. The National Electricity Plan 2018 identifies 22GW of plants that do not have space to implement the emission control systems. In addition, incorporating the emission control equipment would be financially unviable for older plants which would have to materially hike tariffs to justify such an investment.
Also, the new Market-based Economic Dispatch (MBED) mechanism which aims to nationally pool India’s generation resources is set to bring in competition by ensuring the least-cost generation sources are dispatched first. This will lead to a natural death for expensive coal-fired power plants and further dim the prospects for new coal-fired capacity.
India’s aggregate power demand, as well as daily peak demand, will continue to grow strongly. Accelerating capacity commissioning of 25-30GW of renewables with viable battery storage prices for grid-firming would allow the government to ramp up coal capacity retirements gradually over this decade.
Source: economictimes.indiatimes.com