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Govt looking to boost made in India solar panels

In a bid to push Make in India, the government will soon announce a policy to boost end-to-end manufacturing of solar equipments like polysilicon, wafers, cells and panels.

Updated on: Apr 01, 2016 11:13 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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In a bid to push Make in India, the government will soon announce a policy to boost end-to-end manufacturing of solar equipments like polysilicon, wafers, cells and panels.

The policy is aimed towards policy to boosting end-to-end manufacturing of solar equipments like polysilicon, wafers, cells and panels. (AFP Photo)
The policy is aimed towards policy to boosting end-to-end manufacturing of solar equipments like polysilicon, wafers, cells and panels. (AFP Photo)

“The incentives under this policy to will be given to those setting up manufacturing units worth Rs 1000 crore or more” says a top source who refused to be named. The focus of the policy is to reduce the cost of electricity and capital. Solar equipment manufacturing is an energy-intensive sector, and so special attention is being given to enable manufacturers to procure electricity at the cost of generation without the additional levies of surcharge.

This policy is being designed by the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion in association with the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy and will be taken to the Cabinet for its approval, soon. As the government has raised India’s target for solar power generation to 100,000 MW from 20,000 MW by 2022, there is an acute need to promote equipment manufacturing that is largely dependent on imports. From present levels of manufacturing capacity of 1.5 gigawatts (GW), sources in the government say that the target is to increase it to 10 GW in the next 4 years.

The Make in India policy already recognizes solar manufacturing as an industry with “strategic importance”. Apart from providing equipment supply security, a recent KPMG report says that, “A sustainable domestic manufacturing industry can save $42 billion in equipment imports by 2030 and create 50,000 direct jobs and at least 125,000 indirect jobs in the next 5 years.”

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Suchetana Ray

Suchetana Ray covers aspects of the government’s economic policy. A news junkie, she is invested in HT’s ‘digital first’ policy.

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