The biggest challenge facing Indian clean-energy projects is the high
cost of finance, according to a wind-farm developer founded by General
Electric Co.’s (GE) former regional chief. Tax-free bonds, credit enhancements and partial loan guarantees are
among the options that India’s new government needs to consider to
deliver on targets to double renewable capacity to 55 gigawatts by 2017,
said Tejpreet Chopra, chief executive officer of Bharat Light and Power
Pvt. Ltd.
Borrowing costs of about 13% “make any infrastructure project
difficult”, said Chopra, who left his role at GE in 2010 to start the
developer based in Gurgaon. “We need to be a little more creative to
attract the capital we need.” Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who swept to power on 16 May, has
pledged a clean-energy revolution to end blackouts. An obstacle to that
is the highest interest rates among Asia’s biggest economies, which have
prompted India’s worst lending slowdown since 2009. Bharat Light, which is backed by Draper Fisher Jurvetson, will need
to raise about $800 million to fund plans to quadruple its capacity to
about 800MW over the next few years, said Chopra. “The good thing is
sentiment is getting much, much better”, with the new government.
Funding renewable projects with government-backed green bonds could
lower the cost of clean power by as much as 25%, according to an April
report by the Indian School of Business (ISB) and San Francisco-based
Climate Policy Initiative, which calculated that high interest rates add
as much as 32% to the cost of clean power in the nation.
Maximizing generation
Developers such as Bharat Light and Morgan Stanley-backed Continuum
Wind Energy Pte. are maximizing the amount of power generated by wind
farms by doing away with a system under which turbine makers built and
operated projects for investors. Chopra estimates about 15 of India’s 21 gigawatts of wind capacity
was built for investors buying projects to claim accelerated-
depreciation benefits. “Generally, most of the plants built to claim tax
benefits are running sub-optimally,” Chopra said. “You can improve the
efficiencies a fair bit.”
Bharat Light bought one of India’s largest wind farms from indebted
property developer DLF Ltd last year. It has been able to reduce turbine
downtime by as much as 9% thanks to a system set up with International
Business Machines Corp. that collects machine data to predict failures.The system is also allowing Bharat Light to forecast power
generation, he said. The Central Electricity Regulatory Commission last
year ordered wind farms to start predicting their day-ahead output
within a 30% band and plans to fine those who can’t comply.
Developers including Tata Power Co. Ltd and Goldman Sachs Group
Inc.’s ReNew Wind Power Pvt. Ltd have protested, saying that’s
impossible and that fines would wipe out profits in an industry that has
drawn about $10 billion of investment 2011. “What the government is asking for is very fair,” Chopra said. “We’re already beating it internally.” Bloomberg
Source: Livemint
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