India Solar Prices
Set to Drop on Competition, Costs
by
Anindya Upadhyay
January
12, 2017, 2:31 AM GMT+8
Falling interest rates, lower panel prices
driving trend
The
price paid for solar power in India at auction is set to fall below last year’s
record lows for the South Asia nation, driven by plummeting panel prices, falling
interest rates and competition among developers seeking a slice of the
country’s renewables market.
Prices could dip lower than the 4.34 rupees
(6 cents) a kilowatt-hour offered in auctions held in the state of Rajasthan a
year ago, according to at least one developer of solar projects in India.
“This year we will see prices fall below 4
rupees a kilowatt-hour for sure and it will be viable,” said Rahul Munjal,
chairman and managing director of Hero Future Energies Pvt, the clean-energy arm of Hero Group, one of India’s largest
automakers.
In 2016, countries from Chile to the United
Arab Emirates broke records with deals to generate electricity from sunshine
for less than 3 cents a kilowatt-hour, half the average global cost of coal
power. With China and Japan joining the competitive-bidding bandwagon, as much
as 25 gigawatts of solar capacity could be awarded through auctions this year
globally, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
“We feel interest rates will go down and the
cost of solar panels will fall, so these will have a great effect on breaching
the 4 rupees a unit-mark," said Hero Future’s Munjal, adding that he’s
looking at a 50 basis-point decline in domestic interest rates.
Hero Future Energies, backed by the
International Financial Corp., operates 360 megawatts of wind and solar
capacity and has another 1.4 gigawatts of projects in the pipeline. The company
plans to participate in some of the upcoming auctions.
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