JAWAHARLAL NEHRU NATIONAL SOLAR MISSION PROGRAMME AND POLICY DR AHMAR RAZA SENIOR CONSULTANT NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF SOLAR ENERGY

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1 JAWAHARLAL NEHRU NATIONAL SOLAR MISSION PROGRAMME AND POLICY DR AHMAR RAZA SENIOR CONSULTANT NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF SOLAR ENERGY

2 Solar Energy Solar energy can be used through two main routes: SOLAR PHOTOVOLTAIC For direct electricity generation SOLAR THERMAL For heating, cooking, drying and electricity generation

3 Solar Resource Availability in India Daily solar radiation 4-7 kwh per sq. m sunny days in a year. 600,000 MW from 1% land area trillion kwh solar radiation incident in a year. Radiation data collected by India Meteorological Department. 123 Solar Radiation Resource Assessment Stations have been set up in the country by MNRE. NIWE has launched Indian Solar Radiation Atlas providing resource at any location.

4 Solar Energy across states Solar Power Projects commissioned during is MW against target of 2000 MW Solar Resource 1120 MW 405 MW 1270 MW 386 MW 145 MW 15 MW 776 MW 41 MW 144 MW 93 MW 528 MW 573 MW Solar: 6,762 MW (Mar 2016) 10 MW 16 MW 67 MW 12 MW 0.3 MW 5 MW 13 MW 1062 MW Current status, Outlook and opportunities MNRE India has potential for 748 GW (considering deployment on 3% of wastelands) March

5 Application segment Grid solar power incl. roof top & distributed small grid connected plants Off-grid solar applications including solar lights Solar collectors Target for Phase I ( ) 1,000 MW JNNSM Road Map 100 MW 200 MW 5 million 7 million sq meters Cumulative Target for Phase 2 ( ) Cumulativ e Target for Phase 3 ( ) 4,000 MW 20,000 MW 1,000 MW 10 million 15 million sq meters 2,000 MW 20 million 20 million sq meters Revised Targets for ,000 MW Revised Targets for ,000 MW 600 MW Not yet fixed 15 million sq metes 20 million sq meters 5

6 Solar Scale-up Plans- 100 GW Vision Category 1. Rooftop Projects 40,000 MW Category 2. Large scale Projects Inside Solar park Outside Solar Park 20,000 MW 40,000 MW Cumulative Solar Targets (GW) Current status, Outlook and opportunities MNRE Large scale solar Roof-top March

7 Targets & Achievements Application segment Achievement till June, 2016 Grid solar power incl. roof top & distributed small grid connected plants Off-grid solar applications 7805 MW MW Solar collectors 12 million sq meters 7

8 Policy and Regulatory Framework Tariff for purchase of Solar Power by Regulators Bundling solar with unallocated thermal power through Central Agency NTPC Vidyut Vyapar Nigam (NVVN) Competitive Bidding to select utility scale power projects Generation Based Incentive for small grid solar power projects Solar specific RPO 0.25% in 1 st phase increase to 3% by Solar RE Certificates. Refinancing to lower interest rates (5%) for off-grid applications, involvement of NABARD Capital Subsidies (30% to 90%) Grant support for R&D and technology demonstration

9 Plummeting cost of power from solar Bidding tariffs for solar projects have been declining due to drop in capital costs and competitive bidding Tariffs evolved in FIT - Competitive bid process (INR/kWh) Lowest tariff quoted in Rajasthan: Rs. 4.34/KWh ($ cent 6.45) for 70 MW from Fortum Lowest tariff quoted in Andhra Pradesh: Rs. 4.63/KWh ($ cent 7.02) for 500 MW from SunEdison Rs. 4.63/KWh ($ cent 7.02) for 350 MW from SoftBank Current status, Outlook and opportunities MNRE Highest Bid (Rs./KWh) Lowest (Rs./KWh) Weighted Avg. Price (Rs./KWh) Lowest tariff quoted in Haryana: Rs. 5/KWh ($ cent 7.4) for 140 MW from Acme Lowest tariff quoted in Madhya Pradesh: Rs. 5.05/KWh ($ cent 7.65) for 50 MW from Sky Power March

10 MNRE schemes to support solar deployment Target Status 2,000+5,000 MW 4485 MW Tendered 7 1 Target 20 GW Status 20 GW approved (33 parks) Target 100 MW 6 2 Target 300 MW Status 100 MW Sanctioned Status 347 MW Sanctioned Target Status 15,000 MW ( ) 3000 MW tendered Target Status 1,000 MW 1,000 MW sanction Target 4200 MW Current status, Outlook and opportunities MNRE Status 300 MW Commissioned, 1127 MW Sanctioned, 2403 MW in Principle March

11 Rooftop: Target to achieve 40 GW grid tied Status 300 MW Installed capacity 2403 MW Projects approved (in Principal [Potential for 124 GW exists] Target 40 GW by 2022 Current support Subsidy of 30% of capital cost for domestic and private Institutional, Incentive scheme for Government. Promotional measures: 17 States have rooftop provisions in their Solar Policy and 26 States/UTs have notified regulations Rooftop included under Integrated Power Development Scheme and guidelines issued A grant of INR 5000 Cr. has been approved to support 4200 MW rooftop projects $ 2 billion line of credit through KFW, WB and ADB for rooftop projects March 2016

12 General Status of Solar Park Approved 34 Solar Parks in 21 States Aggregate capacity approved: 20,000 MW CFA released so far: Rs. 540 Crore

13 20 GW Solar parks 34 Parks (21 states) with capacity 20,000 MW approved Gujarat 700 MW MP 750 MW+ 500 MW+500 MW +500 MW +500 MW Chattisgarh 500 MW 2000 MW J&K 100 MW Haryana 500 MW Rajasthan MW Maharashtra 500 MW+500 MW +500 MW Karnataka Current status, Outlook and opportunities MNRE Kerala 200 MW Himachal Pradesh 1000 MW Uttarakhand 50 MW UP 600 MW Telangana 500 MW AP: Anantapur, Kurnool, Kudappa 1500 MW MW MW MW Tamil Nadu 500 MW Orissa 1000 MW WB 500 MW Arunachal 100 MW Assam 69 MW Nagaland 60 MW Meghalaya 20 MW March 2016

14 Power will be purchased by Rs. 4.43/kWh and sold to buying with a trading margin of 7 paisa/kwh. S. No. State Under 2000 MW VGF Scheme Under 5000 MW VGF Scheme Allocation (Open) Allocation (DCR) Total Allotted Allocation (Open) Allocation (DCR) 1 Andhra Pradesh Chhattisgarh Gujarat Himachal Pradesh Karnataka , Maharashtra Odisha Puducherry Uttar Pradesh Total Allotted 2, ,785 1, ,000 March

15 Canal Banks and Canal Tops scheme Scheme Target: 50 MW canal-top SPV & 50 MW canal-bank SPV Central Financial Assistance: Canal-top SPV: Lower of Rs.3 crore/mw or 30% of project cost Canal-bank SPV: Lower of Rs.1.5 crore/mw or 30% of project cost Canal-top SPV: 50 MW capacity projects allotted to 7 States - Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala, Punjab, Uttarakhand & Uttar Pradesh Canal-bank SPV: 50 MW capacity projects allotted to 5 States Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Kerala, Uttarakhand & West Bengal Implementation Status: Majority of these projects will be commissioned by Sep 2016

16 NTPC s own Commitment : 10,000 MW 200 MW already Commissioned About 3,000 MW - under various stages of tendering / implementation NTPC is also bundling solar power from its own plants with thermal power from NTPC stations which have completed 25 years PPA (eg. Singrauli) MNRE projects through NTPC : 15,000 MW 3,000 MW- Bundling Scheme Tenders issued: 3,000 MW Reverse auction completed: 2,520 MW PPAs signed: 2,120 MW Lowest tariff discovered: Rs. 4.34/kWh 5,000 MW- process initiated by MNRE 7,000 MW- to be initiated after successful award of 5,000 MW

17 RPO - Policy Provisions Section 86 (1) (e) of Electricity Act, 2003 mandates SERCs to fix RPOs. Tariff Policy amended in January, 2016 provides for Long-term RPO trajectory to be prescribed by MoP Out of total RPO, Solar RPO to reach 8% of total consumption of energy, excluding Hydro Power, by March, 2022 Discom to Procure 100% power from Waste to Energy plant Uniform RPO across the States All the SERCs have notified the Regulations specifying the solar and non-solar RPO for the obligated entities in their State. NAPCC suggested renewable energy share for to be set 5% and increased 1% every year.

18 RPO Declaration by SERCs and Compliance Solar RPO ranges from as low as 0.25% to 2.5% for some of the SERCs yet to declared Solar RPO Only a few declared RPO trajectory up to As per NAPCC recommendations the total RPO for to be 12% RPO Compliance: Above 100% RPO compliance by Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Uttarakhand and A&N Island. 100% to 60% compliance by Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Tripura, Chandigarh and Lakshdweep. Less than 60% compliance by rest of 17 States including Delhi and 3 UTs

19 Solar Lanterns Home & Community Lighting Village Street Lighting Water Pumping Systems Mini/Micro Grid Power Plants/ Home Systems Charging Stations Vaccine Refrigeration Cold Storages Any Other Application

20 Off-Grid / Decentralized Solar PV Programme CFA Pattern 30% capital subsidy to end-users 90% for special category States for defined category. 40% through banks coupled with Loan Implementing Agencies State Nodal Agencies NABARD and other banks Channel Partners Other Government Institutions

21 Category of Systems with capacity Limitation Sno. Category Capacity Solar Lighting System 1. Solar lighting System- street lights, home lights, Up to 40 Wp 2. lantern (LED) Solar Power Packs/Plants 1 Solar power packs/ SPV Power Plants (with battery 7.2VAh/Wp) Up to 300 Wp >300 Wp to 10kWp >10 kwp to 100 kwp 2 SPV Power Plants (Without Battery) Up to 500 kwp Street Lights through SPV power Plant Up to 100 kwp 3 Solar Pumps 1 DC Pumps Up to 2 HP >2HP to 5HP 2 AC Pumps Up to 2 HP >2HP to 5HP >5 HP to 10 HP* Mini / Micro Grids 1. Micro Grid Up to 10 kwp 2. Mini Grid >10 to 500 kwp

22 SPV Power Plant at Gulmarg Development Auth. Guest house, J&K System Cumulative SPV Lighting Systems/Minigrids Installed ( on ) Number Lanterns 10,01,268 Home Lights 12,85,841 Street Lights 3,96,184 Mini Grids 850 Solar Pumps 51,727

23 Capital Subsidy Scheme for Solar Lighting systems and small power packs Year of launch Targeted area USER Category Mode of implementation Central Financial Assistance and Bank loan Achievement Target Budget Rural & Semi Urban Individual households Financing of systems through Regional Rural Bank/scheduled Commercial banks/cooperative Banks MNRE Support : 40% (Back ended) Bank Loan: up to 60% User share : Remaining share if loan is less than 60% Advance parking of funds with banks facility 3,00,000 System financed since inception of scheme 1,00,000 systems Rs 100 Crs outlay Rs 23 Cr already released to NABARD as Advance Issues Only banks are participation in the scheme Poor progress in NE States

24 1,83,000 Solar Pumps Sanctioned More than 77,000 installed in the country. 1,10,000 pumps sanctioned to States during last 2 year (Irrigation) 30,000 was sanctioned to NABARD during ,330 nos. sanctioned to States (Drinking Water).

25 Solar Pumping Programme implemented through NABARD Year of launch Target Area Rural, Semi-urban User Category Individuals Farmers, Individuals Group, NGOs, FPO, SHGs, JLGs Mode of implementation Financing of Solar Pumping systems through Regional Rural Bank/scheduled Commercial banks/cooperative banks Central Financial Assistance and Bank loan MNRE Support : 40% (Back ended) Bank Loan: 40% ( 3 year minimum lock in period) User share : 20% Advance parking of funds with bank facility Achievement 1000 System financed since inception of scheme Target for ,000 Solar pumps by December 2016 Budget Rs 130 Crs released during still not utilised Issues Collateral for Loans Non consideration of System as Asset Collateral on full amount (Subsidy +Loan) 24 banks participating only No progress in Potential States (as per ground water table) like Bihar, West bengal Jharkhand, Odisha, Assam

26 Standards for the programme Specification for Modules Invertors Batteries Balance of Systems To maintain the standard, Ministry empanel component manufacturer from time to time

27 REQUIREMENT AND SOURCES OF FUNDS TO ACHIEVE 100 GW BY 2022 Fund requirements Rs. in crores Solar Power Projects 5,00,000 Transmission 70,000 Total 5,70,000 Source of Funds: International and Domestic Banks & FIs Multilateral and Bilateral Organisations Sovereign, Insurance and Pension Funds Capital Market Indian Renewable Energy Fund by IREDA Budgetary Support from GOI

28 Manufacturing About 60 Solar cells and module manufacturers are operating in the country Public Sector companies are allocating a separate capacity for Domestic Content Requirement (DCR) Companies like Trina Solar, JA Solar, Foxconn, etc. have signed MoUs for setting up manufacturing facilities in India Solar Cell and Module manufacturing capacity (MW) 5,000 2,756 1,305 - Solar Modules Installed Capacity (MW) 1, Solar Cells Operational Capacity (MW) Push for Make in India Modified Special Incentive Package Scheme(M-SIPS) Subsidy: 20% for investments in SEZs and 25% in non-sezs Reimbursement of CVD/Excise, central taxes and duties Excise duty exemption Solar cell/modules; Machinery and equipment required for setting up production project EVA sheets, solar backsheets, solar tempered glass, flat copper wire etc. Special Economic Zone (SEZ) Duty free import/domestic procurement of goods for development, operation and maintenance of SEZ units Sales tax & service tax exemption March Income tax exemption as follows: 100% exemption for the first 5 years, 50% for next 5 years

29 Sustainability Arrangements Concrete arrangements to ensure timely repair & maintenance Support training programmes, establish service centers, etc. System / Equipment Standards have been laid down and test facilities created to enforce quality Increasing the number of test facilities to accommodate more systems for testing and reducing long waiting for results. Skill Development and Human Resource Development. 50,000 Surya Mitras will be trained in 3 years. Research & Development on all the aspects of Technology development is being supported

30 5 MWp PV (Crystalline) Grid Power Plant at Khimsar Vllage, Jodhpur, Rajasthan (Pilot Scheme)

31 Punjab Engineering College, Sector 1, Chandigarh Govt. College for Girls, Sector 11, Chandigarh March 2016

32 150 MW in Neemuch, MP Ananthapuramu Ultra Mega Solar Park (1500 MW) March 2016

33 Gujarat Solar Park- Charanka Solar Energy development in India Inter Solar 2015 March

34 Reliance 100 MW Solar CLFR Plant in Rajasthan March 2016

35 2.5 MW Solar Thermal Tower Grid Power Plant at Bikaner, Rajasthan

36 1 MW Solar Thermal Power Testing, research & simulation facility at NISE through IIT Bombay & Industry consortium Combination of different collector technologies Direct and indirect steam generation to be demonstrated Compact Linear Fresnel Reflector Parabolic Trough

37 Solar Lanterns

38 Solar Lantern Charging Station in Villages

39 Solar Study Lamp Solar Street Lights Solar Light in a Tribal House

40 SPV Water Pumping Systems

41 1 kwp Solar Power Packs

42 SOLAR COOKERS

43 Community Solar Cooker for indoor Cooking (Scheffler) Outside view (Top) Inside view of kitchen (bottom)

44 Solar Dish Concentrator

45 Solar Water Heaters

46 Solar Air Heating System in Laddakh Solar Still

47 Solar Passive Building State Bank of Patiala, Shimla National Institute of Solar Energy, Gurgaon

48 THANK YOU VERY MUCH