India News
Solar power may become cheaper than coal in India | Writer | Admin | |||
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Solar power tariff may fall below Rs3 per unit after the SECI auction of solar power projects at Bhadla, Rajasthan
India’s solar power prices may be set to
fall below those of thermal (coal) energy.
This is based on an expected cost of around
Rs2.90 per unit for the solar power projects at Bhadla in Rajasthan that have
received 51 bids. This price is less than the average rate of power generated
by the coal-fuelled projects of India’s largest power generation utility, NTPC
Ltd, at Rs3.20 per unit.
State-run Solar Energy Corporation of India
(SECI), which is running the bid process for 750 megawatt (MW) of solar power
capacity at two parks, has received bids totalling 8,750 MW. The bidders
include some first-time participants in India, such as Saudi Arabia’s Alfanar.
The solar space has already seen a
significant decline in tariffs from Rs10.95-12.76 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) in
2010-11. The previous low was Rs3.15 per kWh, bid by France’s Solairedirect SA
in an auction last week to set up 250MW of capacity at Kadapa in Andhra
Pradesh.
This low was preceded by Rs3.30 per unit
quoted for a 750MW project at Rewa in Madhya Pradesh.
Ashvini Kumar, managing director of SECI,
credits the Rewa bid with being a tipping point. The structuring in terms of
payment guarantee and offtake arrangement was the trigger for the sharp drop in
prices and signalled the arrival of the low solar power tariff regime, he
explained.
“Prices have been falling and then came
RUMS (Rewa Ultra Mega Solar park)...and that kind of created history. There was
aggressive bidding. A lot of credit was given to the structuring of the PPAs
(power purchase agreements), bids and offtake arrangement, security by state
and things like that,” said Kumar.
He added that a sub-Rs3.00 per unit price
is possible.
In Bhadla, while Saurya Urja Company of
Rajasthan Ltd is developing a 500 MW park, Adani Renewable Energy Park
Rajasthan Ltd is developing another of 250 MW capacity. Rajasthan Renewable
Energy Corporation Ltd is a joint venture partner in both.
While a total of 24 bids totaling 5,500 MW
were received for the 500 MW capacity on offer, the 250 MW park saw 27 bidders
totalling 3,250 MW.
After the financial bids are opened within
four weeks, a reverse auction process will be run to select the developers.The bidders
include Aditya Birla Renewable, Hero Solar, SBG Cleantech One Ltd, ReNew Solar
Power Pvt. Ltd, ACME Solar Holdings Pvt. Ltd, Green Infra and Azure Power.
Kumar also attributed the growing bidders’ interest to tripartite agreements (TPAs) between the Reserve Bank of India, the Union government and the state governments, which provided comfort to power producers against payment defaults by state electricity boards (SEBs).
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