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Kingaa_bongaa
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Username: Kingaa_bongaa

Post Number: 15532
Registered: 02-2008
Posted From: 12.2.142.12

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Posted on Friday, January 27, 2012 - 11:25 am:   Insert Quote Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

so ippudu lorries ki solar panels petti run cheyochaaaa? ultimate vuntaaadhi idhi jarigithe.
Manaki Manam Kingu, Choosevallaki Bongu.
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Methhanithodugu
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Username: Methhanithodugu

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Registered: 12-2008
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Posted on Friday, January 27, 2012 - 11:17 am:   Insert Quote Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

As i Said before one of the grey areas but booming areas in past 6months Cost of plant per 1MW used to be 16 crore's not its down to 8 crores with right incentives from GOI and daring entrepreneurs this is a Slow & Steady Game ,BTW Govt are gonna tax more on diesel ...

India is producing power from solar cells more cheaply than by burning
diesel for the first time, spurring billionaire Sunil Mittal and
Coca-Cola Co. (KO)’s mango supplier to jettison the fuel in favor of
photovoltaic panels.

The cost of solar energy in India declined by 28 percent since
December 2010, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. The cause
was a 51 percent drop in panel prices last year as the world’s 10
largest manufacturers, led by China’s Suntech Power Holdings Co.
(STP), doubled output capacity.

"Solar is going mainstream in India, helped by Chinese pricing," said
Ardeshir Contractor, founder of developer Kiran Energy Solar Power
Pvt. Kiran, whose investors include Bessemer Venture Partners, an
early financier of Skype Technologies SA, won one of the largest
projects auctioned by India last month.

India joins pockets of Italy, Spain and Hawaii where rising fuel costs
and lower panel prices make solar pay for itself without state
subsidies, New Energy Finance data show. Factories and homes in the
Asian nation switch on emergency diesel-fired generators during
chronic blackouts and to bridge gaps in the power-delivery grid as the
government prepares a $400 billion program through 2017 to curb the
shortfall and spur growth.

"If they had the foresight, these factories would be replacing their
diesel generators now or at least getting what they can from solar,"
said Lalit Jain, chief executive officer of Moser Baer Clean Energy
Ltd., which owns 100 megawatts of operating solar plants in India,
Italy, the U.K. and Germany.
Power Deficit

Electricity demand exceeds supply in India by about 14 percent during
peak hours, and about 400 million people have no access to power,
according to the United Nations.

While European governments have cut preferential rates paid to
solar-plant operators amid an escalating debt crisis, India is driving
down its costs by forcing utilities and developers to compete on
price.

Winners of India’s national solar-capacity auction in December agreed
to supply power for an average rate of 8.78 rupees (17 cents) a
kilowatt-hour by early 2013.

In comparison, electricity from burning state-subsidized diesel costs
generators about 17 rupees, according to Charanjit Singh, an energy
analyst at HSBC Holdings Plc. The cheapest power comes from burning
coal, which is about 4 rupees a kilowatt-hour, though users must be
connected to the grid.
Bharti, Jain

Mittal’s Bharti Airtel Ltd. (BHARTI), India’s largest mobile-phone
operator, and Jain Irrigation Systems Ltd. (JI), the world’s biggest
mango-puree producer and supplier to Coca-Cola, are among companies
swapping diesel generators for photovoltaic modules.

While Airtel’s Bharti Infratel unit typically runs its phone towers on
the cheapest, grid-delivered power, it estimates that electricity from
diesel costs about four times as much.

The company upgraded 1,646 out of about 22,000 rural sites that get
little or no grid-connected power to run on solar and other renewable
sources, it said in an e-mail.

The government’s Telecom Regulatory Authority recommended this month
that at least 75 percent of rural mobile towers and 33 percent of
urban towers run on a combination of solar, wind and diesel by 2020.
India’s 300,000 mobile towers account for about 4 percent of diesel
use, according to HSBC’s Singh.

Jain Irrigation will complete an 8.5-megawatt solar project in March
to replace diesel-fired output at its processing plant in Jalgaon,
Maharashtra, CEO Anil Jain said Jan. 3. The company estimates it could
recoup the cost in as little as five years.
Solar Target

India, the third-biggest energy user behind China and the U.S., has a
goal to have installed 20,000 megawatts of solar- energy capacity by
2022, about equal to 18 new nuclear reactors.

That target is 10 percent of today’s total generating capacity
including all energy sources. Less than 1 percent of that current
power base is solar.

India’s solar industry has benefited from tax breaks and a guaranteed
government buyer of its cleaner power. Diesel generation has been
helped by state subsidies that make the fuel cost less than the market
price to cap inflation.

The diesel price set for the capital Delhi was at 32 percent below the
market rate as of Jan. 16, according to market data published by the
nation’s Oil Ministry.

Factories burn diesel during blackouts to maintain a constant power
source. Their "huge" warehouses and empty rooftops make them a "prime
candidate" for solar power, said Hari Manoharan, an analyst at Energy
Alternatives India. Indian manufacturers are losing more than 432
billion rupees a year as a result of power failures, Manoharan said in
a December report.
GTL, Acme

GTL Infrastructure Ltd. (GTLI), a Mumbai-based owner of 32,000 phone
towers, said it’s saving 56,000 liters of diesel a year after
installing solar panels. Acme Telepower Ltd., a Gurgaon- based company
converting sites for Viom Networks Ltd. and Bharti, estimates the
panels can cut the diesel running time of a rural tower to eight hours
a day from 22, it said Jan. 10.

India charges the highest power prices to industrial and commercial
consumers such as factories, mines and malls, and gives away free
power to farmers for irrigation pumps. As the cost of solar falls,
more businesses are deciding it makes sense, said Akhilesh Magal, an
analyst at Bridge to India.

"Things that weren’t feasible have suddenly opened up," Magal said.
"As prices drop, you suddenly see huge segments of the market open
up."


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-25/solar-cheaper-than- diesel-making-india-s-mittal-believer-energy.html
Dont waste Food
Hyd&Guntur
Jagadish Hatsoff

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