Local manufacturing to become a key element for large solar power projects

 A senior official said, the government plans to make local manufacturing of equipment a key element in tenders for large solar power projects, even as the country aims to add close to 500 Gigawatt of renewable energy capacity by 2030.

 
The secretary of MNRE, Anand Kumar said the ministry of new and renewable energy (MNRE) plans to design the bids in a way to bring manufacturing into the country while taking care of the interest of small and medium developers.
 
“The bigger bids will be focused on manufacturing, while smaller bids will take care of smaller developers, if there is one big bid and one player takes it all that will be unfair.” It would be difficult to get manufacturers with smaller bid sizes, Kumar said.
 
Around 80% of the equipment used in wind power projects are manufactured locally while in the case of solar projects about 90% of the equipment are imported and 85% of which come from China. The cost of solar equipment is expected to drop further after Chinese government recently decided to put brakes on its solar capacity addition.
 
The ministry of power, MNRE and the Central Electricity Authority (CEA) has worked out the country’s installed capacity till 2030.
 
Of the total power requirement of 862 GW, as much as 350 GW will come from solar and another 140 GW will come from wind projects. “These long-term projections are being made so that manufacturing gets a boost and people are assured of what kind of market they are looking at,” Kumar said.
 
To achieve that, the ministry plans to bid out 30 GW solar and 10 GW wind projects every year till 2028. Solar Energy Corporation of India floated a global tender for setting up 5 GW manufacturing capacity linked with Inter-state transmission system (ISTS)-connected solar project for 10 GW aggregate capacity.
 
As part of the tender, developers will be allowed to import polysilicon, but will have to manufacture solar modules locally.
 
The government, however, has not mandated use of locally manufactured solar panels in the project as part of the tender, thereby steering clear of landing into trouble at World Trade Organization (WTO), officials said. “These tenders are WTO compliant,” Kumar said. “The developer is not bound to use the components in the power project. They are free to export,” he said.
 

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