Renewable Energy

India needs $7.2B to promote integrated solar module manufacturing

Investments worth $7.2 billion will be required in the next three to four years to promote integrated manufacturing of solar modules in India, a report said on Thursday. The push to improve local manufacturing could help domestic module manufacturers clock $30 billion (โ‚น2.3 lakh crore) in revenues by 2030 from selling 150 GW at โ‚น15/Wp (Watt peak) and generate employment opportunity for around 41,000 workers, according to the report released by CEEW Centre for Energy Finance (CEEW-CEF).

โ€œIndiaโ€™s push to indigenise the solar manufacturing value chain would require capex investments worth $7.2 billion (โ‚น53,773 crore) over the next three to four years,โ€ it said.

Rishabh Jain, Programme Lead at CEEW, said that solar energy is the cornerstone of Indiaโ€™s goal to establish 500 GW of non-fossil-based capacity by 2030 and long-term net-zero ambition.

He noted that the ongoing geopolitical and energy crises point toward the importance of reducing import reliance and developing a reliable and robust domestic supply chain for industries critical to the energy transition.

To promote domestic solar manufacturing, the government has already announced multiple measures over FY 2021-22, including allocating $3.2 billion (โ‚น24,000 crores) through the production-linked incentives scheme and levying a basic customs duty of 25% and 40% on all imports of solar cells and modules, respectively.

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