Sector is growing and poised to meet energy needs of the unserved; report calls for increased public-private partnership, access to debt and improved metrics
NEW DELHI, October 5, 2017 -- The Clean Energy Access Network (CLEAN) (thecleannetwork.org), India’s industry body representing the decentralized renewable energy (DRE) sector, today launched its first annual “State of the Sector” report. The report highlights the significant progress and innovation made by the sector. It also calls for increased public partnership to scale DRE solutions and to build a modern energy system for India that serves the hundreds of millions of people still without access to electricity or clean cooking. The State of the Sector report is designed to be a benchmark for the DRE sector’s performance in India (including CLEAN’s 104 members, 69 of which are last-mile energy delivery micro-, small and medium-sized enterprises). It also seeks to identify access to finance needs for the sector and mechanisms to address them, and to outline the ways that DRE should be integrated into existing policies to accelerate energy access. Key sector findings for Fiscal Year (FY) April 2016 to March 2017 include:
Also launched was DREEM (www.dreemtool.com), a new platform that provides holistic and contextualized evaluation of DRE enterprises in India. The tool houses extensive backend data on the external business environment as well as DRE sector, and combines it with enterprise specific data to generate performance scores based on standardized metrics. DREEM has been designed to be relevant for both financial institutions as well as DRE enterprises, in order to help them with pointed analysis for strategic decision-making. DREEM was developed by Intellecap Advisory, and is being anchored by CLEAN. “The innovation and entrepreneurship of the decentralized renewable energy sector in India are a critical part in building the digitized, decentralized and democratized energy system of the 21st century that India envisions”, said report author Surabhi Rajagopal. “Private sector delivery of distributed energy access, given adequate public partnership, can help India achieve quality, reliable energy access faster, while ensuring rural economic development, energy security, and climate resilience.” The Government of India (GoI) has made universal 24x7 energy access a priority, yet at current rates achieving that goal will take considerably longer than December 2018, the target for universal household electrification set out by the recently announced “Saubhagya” scheme. And in the case of clean cooking, the goal is 2019 for reaching 50 million new LPG connections, but long-term affordability and diverse regional cooking needs will require multiple solutions. “CLEAN and its members stand ready to work with all stakeholders to realize the government’s energy access priorities”, said CLEAN’s chief operating officer Harihara Mohapatra. “India has the ability to not only scale decentralized solutions for itself, but for the global community as it seeks to achieve Sustainable Development Goal 7 (SDG7).” Both the State of the Sector report and the DREEM tool were supported by the Shakti Sustainable Energy Foundation.
About CLEAN CLEAN, which is supported by USAID, represents 104 organizations including small- and medium-sized enterprises, community organizations, R&D institutions and policy think-tanks in the decentralized renewable energy (DRE) sector across India. For more information, visit thecleannetwork.org Media Contacts Madhuri Negi, madhuri@thecleannetwork.org , +91 9899045698