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DISCOMs and Solar Rooftop Capacity.

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April 11, 2018

What is the issue?

  • Despite the ambitious targets and incentives offered, the solar rooftop component remains below the potential.
  • It calls for concerted measures from the DISCOMs, to tap this beneficial segment.

How is the solar rooftop scenario?

  • Capacity - Capacity addition in rooftop solar stood at around 870 megawatt (MW) in 2017.
  • Notably, the target was set as 5,000 MW for the FY 2017-18.
  • As of 2017, the cumulative rooftop solar installed capacity was only 1.6 GW.
  • Target - At this pace, rooftop solar installations are unlikely to cross even 10 GW by 2022.
  • This is far short of the targeted 40 GW under India’s National Solar Mission (100 GW of solar energy capacity by 2022).
  • Incentives - Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) offers incentives in the form of capital subsidies.
  • There is also the net metering policy which allows consumers to sell excess power to distribution companies (DISCOMs).
  • However, DISCOMs have failed to catalyse rapid deployment of rooftop component.

Why are the DISCOMS hesitant?

  • Business - Rooftop deployment, especially in the commercial and industrial category could impact DISCOMs’ businesses.
  • The reduction in demand for grid electricity may lead to revenue losses.
  • Subsidies - Cross subsidization is a strategy of setting higher prices for one set of consumers to subsidize to another set of consumers.
  • Rooftop segment cross-subsidises residential and agricultural consumers.
  • These revenue losses compound the financial burden on DISCOMs.

What is the recent scheme in this regard?

  • MNRE recently proposed the Sustainable Rooftop Implementation for Solar Transfiguration of India (SRISTI) scheme.
  • It incentivises the installation of roof top solar projects in India.
  • A central financial assistance will be provided only for installation of roof top solar plants in residential sectors.
  • It is an evolutionary step towards a DISCOM-driven model of rooftop solar adoption.
  • The proposed Rs.14,400-crore incentive fund would compensate DISCOMs for their revenue losses.

Why should DISCOMs take up rooftop component?

  • Economic benefits - Solar generation close to the point of consumption lowers transmission and distribution losses.
  • Further, targeted solar deployment in select geographies could minimise the problems of grid overloading.
  • It thereby lowers the requirements of investment for upgradation of distribution infrastructure.
  • Jobs - The deployment of rooftop solar is estimated to create 24.7 full-time equivalent jobs per MW.
  • This is significantly higher than the corresponding figure of 3.5 jobs per MW for utility-scale solar (generated and fed into the grid).
  • Thus, realising 40 GW target would provide employment to more than 2 lakh people.

What could the DISCOMs possibly do?

  • Awareness - With limited penetration, solar PV systems are still an unfamiliar technology for many.
  • Moreover, the cost benefit with solar tariffs dipping below Rs.5 per kWh for small-scale projects is also unknown.
  • DISCOMs could utilise their existing bill collection and payment networks to disseminate information.
  • This is essential to create awareness on various incentive schemes as well as to create demand for rooftop solar.
  • RESCO model - The Renewable Energy Service Company (RESCO) model of rooftop solar helps address high upfront cost of installations.
  • Under this, the developer bears the upfront capital investment for the installation.
  • The consumer hence only pays for the electricity consumed.
  • So far, the implementation of the RESCO model has largely been driven by developers.
  • This has favoured large-scale rooftop systems and commercial and industrial consumers with higher creditworthiness.
  • The DISCOMs could play the role of demand aggregators to facilitate the implementation of the RESCO model.
  • It could coordinate between developers, financiers, and consumers to take RESCO model across all consumer segments.
  • Certainty - DISCOMs should provide greater certainty over cash flows for developers or financiers.
  • E.g. the Bengaluru has a tripartite agreement between consumers, developers/financiers and the DISCOM to operationalize this.
  • Expansion - The DISCOMs could enable developers to expand their service areas beyond their regional geographies.
  • Given the widespread network of DISCOMs, they could provide certain additional services to developers.
  • These may include bill collection and operations and maintenance.
  • These services are prohibitively expensive for developers, in remote areas.  
  • Such facilities also offer opportunities for building new revenue streams to DISCOMs.
  • All these in effect may make DISCOMs active participants in India’s rooftop solar revolution.

 

Source: BusinessLine

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