Nampoothiri RESolve
Nampoothiri RESolve
Nampoothiri RESolve
Madhavan Nampoothiri
• Assistance in
– Market Entry strategy for solar firms to India
– Market Intelligence on the Indian Solar PV sector
– Concept-to-Commissioning of PV projects
– Policy and Regulatory issues
Agenda
1. Introduction
5. Conclusion
Agenda
1. Introduction
2. How is Thin Film Technology doing in India ?
5. Conclusion
Sun Shines on India
- Solar Resource availability
- 4-7 kWh/Sq.m/day in most parts of India
- Energy supply-demand imbalance
- 80% of oil is imported
- High reliance on imported coal
- Peak power deficit of 12.7%
- 50% of India’s population has very little access to electricity
- GHG emissions
- Policy and Regulatory support(MNRE and various state
governments)
300
Annual PV Installations
200
Cumulative Installations
100 27 36
9 9
0
2009-10 2010-11 2011-12
Year
Source: MNRE
Major focus on ground mounted systems
Policies and Status
Policy(Grid- Capacity Projects Commissi Domestic
connected PV) addition targets allocated oning content
status(31st status(31st requirement(
March 2012) March DCR)
2012)
JNNSM 10 GWp by 2022 ~ 600 MWp ~ 150 C-Si : Cells
allotted in Phase MWp and Modules
1(including TF : No
migration mandate
projects)
Rajasthan 350 MWp by Nil Nil No
2017
Gujarat 500 MWp by ~ 500 MWp ~ 300 No
2014 MWp
Madhya Pradesh RPO targets None. 200 MWp Nil Same as
planned for JNNSM
2012-13
Orissa RPO targets 25 MWp Nil No
1. Introduction
5. Conclusion
C-Si dominates in production….
100
80
60
40
20
0
- India bucks the global trend
Total IREDA NVVN - Thin films grabbed more
Type of scheme than 60% market share
C‐Si Thin Films
Source: MNRE
India – a good export market for global TF
companies
a-Si/μc-Si CIGS CdTe
-CdTe very popular, First Solar has high market share(about 200
MWp); 40 MWp plant commissioned in March 2012
- a-Si, despite lower efficiencies, has gained acceptance
-CIGS also has takers
Agenda
1. Introduction
5. Conclusion
Growth Drivers
Technology
-Temperature
coefficient
-Spectral response
Cost
Financing
- Lower module - Ease of
cost financing
- Inexpensive land
through
EXIM/ECB route
1. How is Thin Film Technology doing in India?
Advantages Disadvantages
• Temperature coefficient • Conversion efficiencies
• Better performance under • Area requirement
diffuse light conditions • Higher BOS requirement
• Higher Energy Yield • Breakage
• Faster energy payback • Aging behavior not known
• Module grounding not • Materials shortage/toxicity
required for frameless
modules
Temperature coefficient & Spectral response
– The TF USP..
Efficiency drop at elevated
temperatures
14%
13%
Cconversion efficiency
12%
11%
10%
9%
8%
7%
6%
25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85
Temperature(Deg C)
But..
‐ First Solar raised the warranty outlay for modules used in
hotter regions
‐ Anxiety about long term performance of TF is growing
1. How is Thin Film Technology doing in India?
2,05
1,85
1,65
Euro/Wp
1,45
1,25
1,05
0,85
0,65
0,45
Jun 10 Jul 10 Aug Sep 10Okt 10 Nov Dez 10 Jan 11 Feb 11 Mrz Apr 11 Mai Jun 11 Jul 11 Aug Sep 11Okt 11 Nov Dez 11 Jan 12 Feb 12
10 10 11 11 11 11
• Even after hedging and insurance, cost of capital at 8-9% as against 13%+ for local
financing
But….
US EXIM financed company – Abound Solar has shut
down production
Agenda
1. Introduction
1. Introduction
5. Conclusion
Takeaways..
• Thin film technology adopted by majority of Indian
developers
• Yield, lower capital cost and better financing options
driving TF growth in India
• Local content mandates have had limited impact
• Global TF manufacturers benefitting from India’s
solar boom…
• … but the Indian TF manufacturing ecosystem is yet
to evolve
Conclusion – Thin film will win in India, if..
Madhavan Nampoothiri
+91-98848-29214
madhavan@re-solve.in
www.re-solve.in