Union Minister of New and Renewable Energy, Dr. Farooq Abdullah
has said that India is committed to increasing the share of renewable power in
the electricity mix to 15 per cent by the year 2020. He said an action plan has
already been developed that aims at accelerating the deployment of renewable
energy with a target of around 30 GW of renewable power by 2017. Dr. Abdullah
was addressing a distinguished gathering at the Institute of International and
European Affairs (IIEA) in Dublin in Ireland yesterday.
Stating that with a present installed capacity of over 25 GW of grid-connected power, India today stands among the top five countries of the world in terms of renewable
energy capacity, Dr. Abdullah said renewable power represents about 12 per cent
of total installed electricity generation capacity in India. He added that
E&Y all renewables Country Attractiveness Index has ranked India as the 4th
most attractive investment destination.
Dr. Abdullah highlighted salient
features of the Jawahar Lal Nehru National Solar Mission and said that it aims
to facilitate the installation of 20 GW grid-connected and 2 GW off-grid solar
power, 20 million sq. m of solar thermal collector area and 20 million rural
households with solar home lighting by 2022. He added that India has already
succeeded in setting up about 1 GW solar power capacity. Dr. Abdullah said that
the reverse bidding process adopted under the mission has led to reduction in
the price of solar electricity from about 35 US cents per kWh to less than 17 US
cents per kWh in the last one year alone. He further said that despite the
strong push for solar energy, wind energy continues to contribute significantly
to India’s renewable energy matrix and with over 17 GW installed capacity, India
competes globally in manufacturing and deployment and occupies the fifth
position in the world. He said that surplus biomass material could also
potentially be used to generate about 20 GW of power.
Stating that
around 1.1 million Indian households are already using solar energy to meet
their lighting energy needs, Dr. Abdullah said that the present efforts are
focused on creating a framework for a self-sustaining programme based on a rural
entrepreneurship model to be able to provide universal energy access.
Dr. Abdullah told the international community that India has geared its
policy and regulatory regime to measure up to the challenges of a low carbon
growth paradigm. Giving details he said the national electricity regulatory
framework makes it mandatory for a specified percentage of total electricity in
the country to be generated through renewable power while nationally tradable
renewable energy credits have also been introduced in the form of renewable
energy certificates. He said a national Energy Efficiency Mission aims to save
about 23 million tonnes of oil-equivalent of fossil fuel every year by 2014-15,
along with an avoided electricity capacity addition of 19,000 MW. At the same
time, he said that the national Green India Mission aims at expanding the forest
and green cover by over 10 million hectares over the next decade.
Outlining the roadblocks on low-carbon expressway, the Minister said
that investment and technology are two of the biggest challenges facing the
world today. He said that broad estimates indicate that the India’s investment
requirement in renewable energy would be in the range of at least US $ 50
billion in the next five years alone. The Minister was hopeful that the
renewable energy programme in India would benefit from the proposed Green
Climate Fund under the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). He said in addition to the
proposed funding under multilateral regimes, India also expects finances under
the bilateral route. Dr. Abdullah added that the private sector has also always
played a key role in India’s efforts to tap renewable energy and India
encourages foreign direct investment for renewable energy development and
deployment.
The minister also strongly supported the need for devising a
mechanism for unrestricted flow of renewable energy technologies. He said there
is a real need for creation of a global technology mechanism that treats
renewable energy technologies as ‘Global Commons’. He said that as nations from
around the world meet at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable
Development (Rio+20) at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, India expects a global action
that is compatible with the efforts being made at the national level.
Courtesy: PIB
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