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Ceiling tariffs for auctions to continue, says MNRE Secretar

Ceiling tariffs for auctions to continue, says MNRE Secretar

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CHENNAI: The government will keep imposing a tariff ceiling on solar projects, Renewable Energy Secretary Anand Kumar said, rejecting the industry’s demand to allow them to bid at a price that companies find viable to enable higher participation.

Recent auctions for renewable projects conducted by the Solar Corporation of India (SECI), an arm of the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), have all had ‘ceiling tariffs’ above which bids are not entertained.

Developers have been protesting against these ceilings, maintaining they are too low and are thereby restricting auction participation, and in turn the growth of renewable energy in the country. MNRE Secretary Anand Kumar, however, speaking at a conference in Chennai on Tuesday, defended setting such tariffs and made it clear they would continue, though he was ready and willing to work out “a viable rate”.

“Figuring out the likely tariff is not rocket science,” he said at a CII organised conference on “Green Power 2018”. “We know how much capital is required. We need to take into account the interests of the state utility (buying the power) and the common man. We will continue with location specific bids.”

He further said that his ministry was aware of the developers’ concerns and assured them the rates set would be fair. “If developers feel the upper cap is not viable, they should stay away from bidding,” he said. If indeed most developers stayed away, the government would consider revising the limit set. “We will revise the tariff and developers can bid again,” he said.

Developers were disappointed by the response. “There should be no upper cap,” said Ramesh Kymal, managing director, Siemens Gamesa Renewable Power, who also heads the CII’s Green Energy Committe. “Good quality land for setting up renewable projects is becoming increasingly hard to find and as land costs rise, tariffs are also bound to go up.”

Source: economictimes.indiatimes
Anand Gupta Editor - EQ Int'l Media Network

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