Growth Of Renewable Solar Rooftop Energy In India
Coming from a family business of investing in FMCG, Renewable Energy & Recycling, Puneet Goyal (M.S. in Industrial & System Engineering from Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta USA) is a fair zealous operator in multidimensional fields and brings to the table his extensive network & knowledge about production and supply chain business in India
At a time, when the world is facing global warming and the burden on natural resources is increasing, the world is now switching towards cleaner form of energies. Renewable solar roof top is one of them. Most developed economies of the world have started their solar programmes by targeting household rooftops. Solar power has reached grid parity and is the cheapest source of distributed power across the world. The centre has been upward revising renewable targets every few years. Major research agencies have also deeply underestimated the renewable capacity addition over the last 10 years. India has still not realized its potential for renewable energy addition fully. India has almost reached 10 percent installed capacity with renewable in November 2019.
Solar as a technology is ideally adapted to the distributed concept. Many countries have used large-scale solar installations in an effort to quickly achieve scale and simultaneously push down costs. In India this focus on large utility scale solar seems to have become an unintended obstruction in the development of the rooftop segment. There are different stakeholders in the solar sector such as consumers system integrators, suppliers and financing institutions
Government has taken many steps to popularize the solar roof top installation in commercial as well as in domestic households. Some policies and changes, like the recent notification on making the AC capacity of a solar power plant as the primary capacity metric is helping to boost the industry. The renewable voice is growing louder among all stakeholders. DISCOMS have become the additional advantage of using their distribution transformer capacities more efficiently by enabling small scale distributed
At a time, when the world is facing global warming and the burden on natural resources is increasing, the world is now switching towards cleaner form of energies. Renewable solar roof top is one of them. Most developed economies of the world have started their solar programmes by targeting household rooftops. Solar power has reached grid parity and is the cheapest source of distributed power across the world. The centre has been upward revising renewable targets every few years. Major research agencies have also deeply underestimated the renewable capacity addition over the last 10 years. India has still not realized its potential for renewable energy addition fully. India has almost reached 10 percent installed capacity with renewable in November 2019.
Solar as a technology is ideally adapted to the distributed concept. Many countries have used large-scale solar installations in an effort to quickly achieve scale and simultaneously push down costs. In India this focus on large utility scale solar seems to have become an unintended obstruction in the development of the rooftop segment. There are different stakeholders in the solar sector such as consumers system integrators, suppliers and financing institutions
Government has taken many steps to popularize the solar roof top installation in commercial as well as in domestic households. Some policies and changes, like the recent notification on making the AC capacity of a solar power plant as the primary capacity metric is helping to boost the industry. The renewable voice is growing louder among all stakeholders. DISCOMS have become the additional advantage of using their distribution transformer capacities more efficiently by enabling small scale distributed
power producers. DISCOMS have become an active player in helping to deploy distributed solar. India has one of the highest power transmission and distribution loss metrics in the world. Distributed generation solves this issue with the common point of generation and consumption.
Today, India also needs to move from a power producer to a raw material producer. The manufacturing capacity of all solar system components has not grown and India is a laggard in this matter. However many improvements have been done over the last two to three years. Many state governments have also taken a short sighted view and are facing a buyer’s remorse in a falling capex market.
Now unsubsidized solar has reached grid parity or dare and have become a no brainer for industries to adopt as a long term low risk investment with a cushion against rising electricity costs. Capital subsidies are no longer needed in the industry and the subsidies if any, should be higher in the value chain like manufacturing. But, there are many challenges which are still there in the market and need to be solved. Uneven and constantly changing state policies have created confusion in a market which is already technologically unclear in a consumer’s mind leading to a rampant decision paralysis. System integrators have to bear the brunt of this, since their sales lead cycled and business development costs skyrocket. A single centrally controlled policy needs to be implemented. In-sufficient land or roof area is another issue which every consumer faces.
Improvement in the plant efficiencies over the last 10 years have been significant in ensuring that the kWh generated per sq.ft. keep improving. Solar power plants installation companies have come a long way today with 400 Wp becoming the new normal now. This is direct 4x jump on the land use efficiency in 10 years. With commercially viable bi-facial technologies around the corner this number will jump to 500 Wp within 12-18 months. A higher Wp per sq. ft. has an added advantage of reduced Balance of System(BOS)costs which will push the industry and will help to grow the market in different sectors.
Many measures still need to be taken to support the renewable solar rooftop plants in India. Emerging technologies like storage have to be adopted early in India and manufacturing for the same has to be started early. The next revolution in renewable will be in the storage segment and by 2022 storage is slated to be the enabler for the next 100 GW of renewable in India. Distributed generation and storage will change the way people depend on the grid for their everyday power needs. Energy independence will become a new norm. It is the result that even common people are also acknowledging rooftop solar power energies.
India’s young and energetic population will adapt to and digest this new technology in no time. Recent studies by international research agencies have declared India to be the cheapest solar market of the world. The transition from a cool to prudent technology has been great till now. It is the time to make this from prudent to dependable over the next five years so that country will fully become dependent upon the renewable solar energy and lead to¬wards a better future.
Today, India also needs to move from a power producer to a raw material producer. The manufacturing capacity of all solar system components has not grown and India is a laggard in this matter. However many improvements have been done over the last two to three years. Many state governments have also taken a short sighted view and are facing a buyer’s remorse in a falling capex market.
Now unsubsidized solar has reached grid parity or dare and have become a no brainer for industries to adopt as a long term low risk investment with a cushion against rising electricity costs. Capital subsidies are no longer needed in the industry and the subsidies if any, should be higher in the value chain like manufacturing. But, there are many challenges which are still there in the market and need to be solved. Uneven and constantly changing state policies have created confusion in a market which is already technologically unclear in a consumer’s mind leading to a rampant decision paralysis. System integrators have to bear the brunt of this, since their sales lead cycled and business development costs skyrocket. A single centrally controlled policy needs to be implemented. In-sufficient land or roof area is another issue which every consumer faces.
Discoms have become an active player in helping to deploy distributed solar
Improvement in the plant efficiencies over the last 10 years have been significant in ensuring that the kWh generated per sq.ft. keep improving. Solar power plants installation companies have come a long way today with 400 Wp becoming the new normal now. This is direct 4x jump on the land use efficiency in 10 years. With commercially viable bi-facial technologies around the corner this number will jump to 500 Wp within 12-18 months. A higher Wp per sq. ft. has an added advantage of reduced Balance of System(BOS)costs which will push the industry and will help to grow the market in different sectors.
Many measures still need to be taken to support the renewable solar rooftop plants in India. Emerging technologies like storage have to be adopted early in India and manufacturing for the same has to be started early. The next revolution in renewable will be in the storage segment and by 2022 storage is slated to be the enabler for the next 100 GW of renewable in India. Distributed generation and storage will change the way people depend on the grid for their everyday power needs. Energy independence will become a new norm. It is the result that even common people are also acknowledging rooftop solar power energies.
India’s young and energetic population will adapt to and digest this new technology in no time. Recent studies by international research agencies have declared India to be the cheapest solar market of the world. The transition from a cool to prudent technology has been great till now. It is the time to make this from prudent to dependable over the next five years so that country will fully become dependent upon the renewable solar energy and lead to¬wards a better future.