Promoting Renewable Energy through Auctions : The Case of India

This knowledge note singles out auctions as an important mechanism that has been implemented in a growing number of countries in recent decades. It features a case study of auctions designed to promote the generation of electricity from renewable sources in India. The country's national- and state-level experience with auctions of solar energy products both large and small attests to the flexibility and adaptability of auction mechanisms. Under the National Solar Mission, auctions have been implemented with good results in a variety of settings. Lessons include the importance of clear ideas about key goals and objectives, and about areas where sacrifices can be made. Experience in several states has also underlined the importance of regulatory stability. This case study is interesting, because India's National Solar Mission led to concurrent implementations of renewable auction schemes. Both national- and state-level auctions have led to successful projects. The Indian central government's experience with auction implementations can be split into three main segments. Phase 1 auctions concern centralized auctions for procuring utility-scale solar plants. Rooftop auctions concern central government conducted auctions for rooftop solar generation in specific cities. No centralized auctions for large-scale solar generation were conducted in 2012 or 2013, so phase 2 auction were created under a new bidding process. Successive delays that were observed in the implementation of phase 2 auctions had negative results. Investors need to feel secure before they will establish a strong manufacturing or developer base.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Khana, Ashish, Barroso, Luiz
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014-06-13
Subjects:ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY, AUCTION, BLACK CARBON, BOTTOM LINE, BURNING COAL, CAPACITY FACTOR, CAPITAL COST, CARBON, CARBON DIOXIDE, CLEAN ENERGY, CLIMATE, CLIMATE CHANGE, CLIMATE POLICY, CO, CO2, COAL, COMBUSTION, DISCOUNT RATE, DISTRIBUTION COMPANY, DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY, ECOSYSTEM, ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION, ELECTRICITY GENERATION, ELECTRICITY GENERATION MIX, ELECTRICITY TARIFFS, EMISSIONS, ENERGY CONSULTANT, ENERGY CONSUMERS, ENERGY CONSUMPTION, ENERGY DATA, ENERGY DEVELOPMENT, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, ENERGY GENERATION, ENERGY INDUSTRIES, ENERGY MIX, ENERGY PRODUCTS, ENERGY SYSTEMS, EXCHANGE RATE, FINANCIAL INCENTIVES, FOSSIL, FOSSIL FUELS, GENERATION CAPACITY, GREENHOUSE, GREENHOUSE GAS, GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS, GREENHOUSE GAS INVENTORY, GREENHOUSE GASES, HEAT, HEAT GENERATION, INCOME, IRRADIATION, LOWER PRICES, METHANE, OIL, PENALTIES, PETROLEUM, PHOTOVOLTAICS, PIPELINE, POLICY MAKERS, PORTFOLIO, POWER SECTOR, RENEWABLE ENERGY, RENEWABLE GENERATION, RENEWABLE PORTFOLIO STANDARD, RENEWABLE SOURCES, SOLAR CELLS, SOLAR ENERGY, SOLAR ENERGY PRODUCTS, SOLAR EQUIPMENT, SOLAR POWER, SOLAR TECHNOLOGIES, SOURCE OF ENERGY, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, TRANSMISSION SYSTEM, UTILITIES, UTILITY-SCALE, WASTE, WIND, WIND ENERGY, WIND POWER, WIND POWER CAPACITY, WIND SITES, WORLD ENERGY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/06/19670595/promoting-renewable-energy-through-auctions-case-india
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18673
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