Solar tariff in India unlikely to beat Gulf rates
- The per unit cost of solar power in India, considered among the cheapest in the world, is unlikely to cost less than what it is in Gulf countries, according to an analysis by an energy think tank. This is primarily due to the lower cost of finance in the countries in the region along with factors such as cheaper land prices.
- Recent recordlow tariffs in Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Saudi Arabia and Qatar are the result of the lower cost of U.S. dollar-denominated, longdated financing, with major tax concessions and other factors driving prices down in the region India and other countries will struggle to secure the same low tariffs discovered in the Gulf auctions
- “It would be extremely difficult for the Indian market to replicate the combination of factors leading to low solar tariffs in the Gulf region
- The Gulf region has achieved tariffs in the range of U.S. cent 1.351.80/kWh, and (outside the Gulf region) Portugal was able to offer a recordlow tariff discovery cost of U.S. cent 1.32/kWh at a recent bid at a 700MW solar energy auction on August 24, 2020. (1 cent = ₹0.7 approx.)
- India’s tariffs, some of the lowest in the world, are about twice that in the Gulf region or around U.S. cent 3.143.25/kWh, the report noted.
- To arrive at their figures, the authors used mathematical modelling and compared two kinds of projects in India
- That were typical of solar power installations in India and one project in Abu Dhabi as well as expert feedback from industry experts
- We note the ongoing technological development of solar combined with ever larger factories driving economies of scale means solar tariffs will continue to see 5-10% annual declines over the coming decade, driving everstronger competitiveness against incumbent fossil fuel alternatives
Source: The Hindu
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