Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Fueling the finances- Lighting up with Solar energy

India has embarked on the phase II of JNNSM and the latest bidding (Feb 22, 2014) saw a good response. To improve bankability of projects, government has revised certain norms. These include Viability Gap funding (VGF) support from the national clean energy fund (NCEF), Credit Guarantee, and reduced FiT (to foster innovation). While these are few policy measures, real thrust to improve the availability of finance is missing.

The rising demand for energy, limited sources of conventional energy which is becoming costlier day by day and the concerns for climate change have propelled India towards tapping the omnipotent source of power – the solar energy. But it comes with an initial price tag and financing solar has become the biggest challenge today.

The Status Quo

Under National Solar Mission(JNNSM) and various state level policies various measures like capital subsidy, tax incentives, Feed in Tariff (FiT), PPAs, REC mechanism etc. are being undertaken to promote solar in India. On the back of these, more than 2 GW of solar capacity has been installed within a span of 4 years. However various problems have been observed vis-à-vis finance.

Although labor & construction costs are low and there is high resource availability, the high cost of financing increases the cost of Renewable energy (RE) in India. This has been highlighted in the CPI-ISB report on “Meeting India’s Renewable Energy Targets: The Financing Challenge”.

The cost of debt is high due to general high rate of interest and a short tenor but variable interest rate debt. Commercial banks, which dominate the debt market, are facing an asset liability mismatch and reaching the lending limits. Moreover, lenders avoid financing on project basis (non recourse) because of unreliability of irradiation data, technology risks and off taker risk (due to poor health of SEBs).

In this climate of lack of access to low cost debt, the equity investors have to take on more risk y assuming more debt. They find it difficult to recycle the equity capital into the next project, as equity gets stuck in one project. Regulatory restrictions further limit the access to alternate sources of equity capital. Even Renewable Energy Certificates (REC) market is weak due to poor enforcement of Renewable Purchase Obligations (RPOs).
So overall, there is much that is desired on the policy as well as at the finance front.

We need to diversify our sources of finance. The report on “Financing Renewable Energy in India” by Nextant Inc(under PACE-D) has suggested various innovative mechanisms which can give a boost to sustainable flow of finance in Indian solar sector. These include green bonds, Off grid Fund and infrastructure debt fund backed by sovereign guarantee. In order to enhance access to tax benefits, India can make tax credits tradable (like in USA) and even allow tax efficient trusts (like in Singapore). REC market Maker (RMM) is a particularly interesting concept to increase bankability of RECs. Besides, securitization of loans, crowd sourcing, risk insurance instruments, etc. are few other innovative mechanisms worth exploring, which are being used in certain parts of world.

As per the PwC report on “Financial engineering as a means to support Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission”, India will require an estimated INR 172,338 crores of investment to meet the target of 22 GW of solar power by 2022. We need to explore ways to catalyze private sector participation in providing capital for manufacturing as well as project development.

The India is one of the sun’s most favored nations, blessed with about 5,000 TWh of solar insolation every year. The solar technology is maturing, projects like Green Corridor are being implemented and even grid parity projections have improved to as early as 2016-17 from end of the current decade. Reasons to be optimistic are manifold.

With right policies and best financial instruments, solar power can make energy accessible to the vast Indian population, besides create millions of jobs and help India achieve energy independence.