Renewable Energy in India is growing at a rapid pace increasing its share of the total capacity from 2% in 2003 to around 10% in 2010.However the share of electricity generation is still quite low at 3% due to the lower capacity load factors of Green Energy Sources compared to Fossil Fuel Sources.The Total Installed Capacity of Renewable Energy in India is around 16 GW with Wind Energy taking the Lion’s share at almost 70% followed by Small Hydro at 15% and Biomass Energy at 12%.Solar Energy in India till now has a capacity of just 6 MW which is estimated to grow to 22 GW by 2022 making Solar Energy one of the Biggest Growth Opportunities in the Field of Indian Energy.
1) Wind power has seen a phenomenal growth of around 33% CAGR in the last 5 years and the total capacity at end of 2009 was 10,892 MW with most of the capacity installed in the state of Tamil Nadu which is the largest state in terms of Alternative Energy Capacity in India
2) Small hydro power Plants of less than 25 MW size are the second largest Green Energy Source in India though with a slow growth rate of around 9% CAGR and has around 2520 MW of Capacity
3) Biomass Energy has been showing a sharp growth of 27% CAGR in recent years and almost 2.1 GW of Biomass Energy Capacity has been installed.
Supply Demand Picture of Electricity – Huge Deficit with Areas of Prolonged Blackouts
India is a Electricity Deficient Country with an estimated 15% deficient in supply during peak demand.According to CEA,India had a peak demand of around 116 MW in Apri-Dec 2009 with 101 GW of Supply resulting in a 12.5% Demand Deficit.The Fast Growing Economy has resulted in even higher demand for power which has not been met by increased demand
India’s Electricity comes mostly from Coal and Hydro Based Energy.Almost 50% of Energy Requirements and 53% of the Electricity is generated from Coal.Despite Coal being the the Dirtiest Form of Energy,India has got little choice in the matter.Most of India’s upcoming Electricity Plants are based on Coal.Hydro Energy is generated mostly from India’s Northern Himalayan States.State Run Companies NHPC and SJVN are responsible for most of the Hydro Capacity.Some private players like the JP Group are also entering the picture.India’s Nuclear Energy Capacity is quite low,however the recent India USA Nuclear Deal should improve that with India planning around 2 GW of Nuclear Capacity addition per year.Renewable Energy forms only 7.7% of the Capacity with around 11 GW of the 16 GW from Wind Energy.
Source | Capacity (in MW) | Percentage |
Total Thermal | 106517 | 64.6% |
Coal | 87,943 | 53.3% |
Gas | 17,374 | 10.5% |
Oil | 1,199 | 0.9% |
Hydro | 37,328 | 24.7% |
Nuclear | 4,560 | 2.9% |
RES | 16,429 | 7.7% |
Total | 1,64,835 |
Source – Indian Ministry of Power
Renewable Energy Incentives,Subsidies and Regulations
India like other countries has enacted a number of measures to promote Renewable Energy in India.There are a number of ministries which are involved in the process of regulation and providing subsidies to the Green Energy Sector in India.Here is a list of various Incentives provided to the Alternative Energy in India.
Tariffs for FY2010 for certain key locations and technologies:
Biomass Energy
State Technology Tariff (Rs./kWh)
Andhra Pradesh Biomass 4.15
Gujarat Cogeneration 5.17
Madhya Pradesh Biomass 3.93
Wind Energy
Wind Zone Tariff (Rs./kWh)
- Wind Zone 1 (200-250 W/m2) Wind 5.63
- Wind Zone 2 (250-300 W/m2) Wind 4.90
- Wind Zone 3 (300-400 W/m2) Wind 4.17
- Wind Zone 4 (above 400 W/m2) Wind 3.75
Small Hydro Energy
All states except HP, Uttarakhand and NE States Hydroelectric (5-25 MW) get a Tariff of Rs 4.62
Renewable Energy Potential
1) Wind Energy has a potential of around 49 GW in the country with around 12 GW of its having been already been utilized.Note this does not include offshore wind energy or future advances in wind energy leading to additional capacity.
2) Solar Energy has enough potential to meet India’s current and future energy needs by multiple times
3) Mini Hydro Plants are supposed to have a 15 GW potential out of which 2.5 GW has been realized
4) Biomass Energy has 25 GW of potential out of which around 2.1 GW has been realized.
India has set up ambitious targets of meeting 15% of its Energy Needs from Renewable Sources up from around 5.5-6% in 2010.WIth India’s Electricity Capacity expected to rise to 450 GW from around 165 GW,this would imply that around 67.5 GW of Electricity Capacity would be needed up from around 16 GW.This would mean around 5 GW of Capacity addition every year in the next decade which is a very tall order.20 GW could be met by Solar Energy according to the Jawaharlal Nehru Solar Mission (JNNSM).Most of the rest would have to met by Wind Energy.Biomass Energy has high costs and reliability problems which mini hydro potential is only 1 GW.Note this is just the capacity I am talking about,for meeting the electricity generation,capacity additions would have to be greater as Solar Energy and Wind Energy have only 20-30% Load Factor compared to 60-80% for Fossil Fuel Energy Sources.Nuclear Energy can contribute another 20 GW.
India’s Renewable Energy Policy and Laws
Indian Renewable Energy Companies
Renewable Energy in Different Indian States
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