Jasmeet Khurana, associate director, consulting, Bridge to India
explains record breaking tariffs for 750MW in Madhya Pradesh. credit:
Bridge to India
The record low tariff can be attributed to large project size and improved risk profile for the Rewa projects with unconditional state government offtake guarantee and deemed generation compensation for grid unavailability.
We believe that reduction in solar tariffs below INR3 level will act as an inflection point for the solar sector and have long term consequences on India’s future power generation mix. India has a low per capita power consumption of 1,075kWh per year and still needs to build most of its power generation capacity to catch up with peer developing countries such as Brazil, Thailand and South Africa, which have 2-4x the per capita power consumption of India.
It is time to add the fourth dimension of storage in India’s power sector regulations
The key arguments against a full scale up for solar PV are its intermittent nature, India’s evening peak power demand profile and the grid’s ability to balance a surge in renewables. Solution to these issues lies in cost effective energy storage and pricing for energy storage is moving in the right direction.
India has already taken the first small step for adopting energy storage. Recent tenders announced by Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) aim to use storage to smoothen the supply curve for solar power plants. The next step would be to use storage with solar projects to carry out peak shifting and match solar power’s generation profile with the country’s evening peak demand profile. Realistically, this may still take a few years to become cost competitive with thermal power but it looks like we are heading there. India’s power sector regulations are defined for generation, transmission and distribution and most regulations had to undergo changes over the past few years to accommodate utility-scale and distributed renewable generation. It is time to take out the editing pens again to add the fourth dimension of storage in India’s power sector regulations
source: http://www.pv-tech.org
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