Nehru National Solar Mission, Phase II

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Draft policy document of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission, Phase II Off grid programmes under the mission Centre for Science & Environment roundtable discussion with stakeholders on December 22, 2012 at CSE office, India Habitat Centre, New Delhi

Presentation Overview Reviewing the past Overview of the draft policy document CSE recommendations & suggestions

Reviewing the programmes of the past The MNRE should learn from the past and needs to review the Phase I of National Solar Mission and the Remote Village Electrification Programme. CSE reviewed the two programs and the findings are as follows: Capital subsidies have failed to achieve sustainability of the program Poor quality of CFLs and SHS in remote areas with lax monitoring by the government Suppliers have try to gain by reducing costs especially by providing substandard panels and not fulfilling maintenance contracts Awareness among beneficiaries about battery replacement and basic SHS maintenance is poor Methodology adopted to accredit companies encourages only large companies The mix of capital and interest subsidies in the national solar mission has promoted the rich

Overview of the draft policy document Following programmes (with target) have been mentioned in the draft: Energy access (20,000 villages/hamlets) Off grid lighting (10 lakh) Solar water pumping (25,000) Telecom towers (25,000) Solar water heating (15 20 cities with solar water heating targeting about 8 million sq. m collector area) Solar Cookers (50,000 installations including 100 institutions) Industrial Process heat applications (400 systems with 250 sq.m each)

Overview of the draft policy document Programmes mentioned in the draft for off grid Energy Access Scheme: The scheme supercedes the Remote Village Electrification Programme It now includes areas that are grid connected with less than 6 hours of electricity Focus given to mini grids under the program with a 90 percent subsidy The MNRE specifies that each household would be allocated a two to five light points (9 W each) and one to three sockets Target: 20000 villages/ hamlets/ dalit bastis

Overview of the draft policy Off grid solar lighting: document This would support projects on mini grids up to 500 kw with special support for solar lanters, solar home lighting systems and power plants upto 3 kwp Phase II would focus on ease of flow of subsidies with major contribution of capital subsidy schemes instead of interest subsidy schemes Target: 10 lakh off grid lighting systems

Overview of the draft policy document Strategies indicated in thedraft for implementation Benchmarking of costs: Phase II will continue this with annual reduction Procurement through bidding: The bidding process is expected to identify if cheaper products for the programmes on off grid Expansion of service network with the help of private players Development of standards for solar products

New concepts: Overview of the draft policy document Development of the star rating systems according to product quality Expansion of testing facilities to check product standard and star rating Online disbursement of subsidies ITenabled monitoring systems

What is missing in the draft There ees is a lack of clarity ca in the edat. draft. Targets agetshave ae been set for different off grid products while the strategies (funding, implementation method etc) only talk for the Energy Access scheme and Offgrid lighting. The extent of financial support for the other schemes has also not been mentioned. There is no analysis done on the first phase of the mission nor the remote villageelectrification electrification programme. This could have enabled the MNRE to move away from capital subsidy.

Off grid lighting: What it should be? The following programmes could help in keeping the off grid programmes clear and distinct: Programme on mini grids for rural and remote areas Off grid lighting program (solar lanterns, home lights, street lights) for rural areas Off grid applications for urban centres (mini grids, solar lanterns, street lights, and any other solar application) Off grid programme for industries (mini grids for captive power production, heating and coolingapplicationsetc etc.) Off grid solar water pumping programme for rural areas The programmes need to be distinguished according to the targeted beneficiaries rather than technology

Financing the mini grid programme Capital costs: The project developer should bring in equity amounting to 20 per cent of the entire capital cost. The rest (80 per cent) would be financed through soft loans at a 5 per cent interest rate. Tariff structure: This would be divided into two segments a basic household level contribution and generation based incentive (GBI). If the households require more electricity than the prescribed minimum need for electrification (1 unit per household), they should be charged at the conventional electricity tariff for the extra units. The difference between the generation cost and the amount collected from households would be the GBI that the project developer could be eligible for. This amount could come from the National Clean Energy Fund passed on through the distribution ib ti companies at the local llevel. l Loads: Households should be given load as per their demand, say 2 light points (9W each) and socket (40W) in any combination, on a flat rate basis. The households should have the option to increase their consumption, given their purchasing power.

Implementation of the off grid programmes Focus should be on interest based subsidies. There is no need for capital subsidies if the down payment is marginalized. Priority should be given to remote villages, which are farthest away from the tail end of the grid. The MNRE need not specify the technical details of required for each household. The end user should have the option to choose according to his purchasing power, and his requirement. Banks need to be incentivised in order to participate p in the program for disbursing interest based subsidies.

Other recommendations Createa a strict monitoring framework and penalize partners who fail in their maintenance Needfor promoting socialentrepreneurshipat at least in Phase II Systems rating could bedone accordingto performance. However, practitioners like manufacturers, system integrators andtechnical suppliers need to be involved in the process