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IEEFA India: Policy certainty, financial support and increased consumer awareness will accelerate rooftop solar installations in India

May 07, 2019

May 7, 2019 (IEEFA India): Rooftop solar is the fastest growing renewable energy sub-sector in India but installations must rapidly accelerate if the nation is to meet its ambitious renewable energy target of 175 gigawatts (GW) by 2022, according to a new briefing by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA).

Vibhuti Garg, IEEFA energy analyst and co-author of the briefing note: Vast Potential of Rooftop Solar In India says India has installed 28 GW of solar capacity, a fourfold increase in less than three years.

“Despite this strong growth, India has achieved only 10% of its 40 GW rooftop solar target,” Garg says.

“This is well below the run-rate anticipated by government.

“To achieve the 2022 target, India will have to greatly accelerate the pace of new solar rooftop installations.”

IEEFA estimates that for next three years, solar rooftop installs will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 50%, suggesting a cumulative 13 GW of installed capacity by FY2021-22.

Tim Buckley, co-author of the note and IEEFA’s director of energy finance studies says there are further steps the government can take to increase installations.

“There has been significant investment in preparing the regulatory framework, upskilling the workforce for small scale deployments, and in educating the market,” Buckley says.

“However, regulatory uncertainty is slowing the pace of rooftop solar installations.

“Policy certainty and more financial subsidies would also incentive the market, as would support for domestic manufacturing and simplifying the net metering application process.”

IEEFA notes shifting subsidies away from imported fossil fuels and reallocating to assist the capital cost of rooftop solar deployments is one way to fund the energy transition for marginalised households.

“At the moment around 70% of the market growth in the solar rooftop market is driven by commercial and industrial consumers enjoying high tariffs,” Garg says.

“Residential consumers and state governments are lagging behind.

“The government’s recent 20-40% financial subsidy for new residential rooftop solar installations should accelerate the pace at the local level.”

Solar is now cheaper than commercial and industrial grid tariffs in all major states in India, with average tariffs between Rs6-11/kWh.

“The payback period is down to 3-4 years for commercial and industrial customers and will reduce further as equipment costs fall, coupled with the rise in retail tariffs,” Garg says.

“This means these consumers can, over time, enjoy a financial gain when they shift to rooftop solar plus battery storage.”

The accelerated depreciation benefit allowing investors to claim 40% asset depreciation (reduced from 80% till 2016) in the first year of installation is an additional factor driving the commercial and industrial market.

“The states must continue to provide concessional exemptions including wheeling charges, the cross-subsidy surcharge and additional surcharges to ensure acceleration of installation across the country,” Garg says.

IEEFA notes rooftop solar is a win-win solution for both consumers and electricity distribution companies in India (discoms) while reducing India’s reliance on imported fossil fuels.

“India’s rooftop solar market holds huge growth potential and should be exploited to help meet the growing energy requirements of the population while enabling the government to reach its ambitious but achievable renewable energy target by 2022,” Buckley says.

“It would make India a global leader in renewable energy installations, a badge to be proud of.”


Read the briefing note:
Vast Potential of Rooftop Solar in India: Setting the Pace for Rapidly Increasing Rooftop Solar Installations in India

Media Contact: Kate Finlayson ([email protected]) +61 418 254 237 (Australia)

Author Contact: Vibhuti Garg ([email protected]) and Tim Buckley ([email protected])

About IEEFA: The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) conducts research and analyses on financial and economic issues related to energy and the environment. The Institute’s mission is to accelerate the transition to a diverse, sustainable and profitable energy economy.

Vibhuti Garg

Vibhuti Garg is Director, South Asia with the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. Vibhuti’s focus is on promoting sustainable development through influencing policy intervention on energy pricing, adoption of new technologies, subsidy reforms, enhancing clean energy access, access to capital and private participation in various areas of the energy sector. 

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Tim Buckley

Tim Buckley, Director, Climate Energy Finance (CEF) has 30 years of financial market experience covering the Australian, Asian and global equity markets from both a buy and sell side perspective. Tim was formerly Director Energy Finance Studies, Australia/South Asia, IEEFA, and was a Managing Director, Head of Equity Research at Citigroup for 17 years until 2008.

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