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Climate Change Mitigation as a stimulus for Universal Rural Energy Access in India Dr. P. BALACHANDRA Department of Management Studies & Centre for Sustainable.

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Presentation on theme: "Climate Change Mitigation as a stimulus for Universal Rural Energy Access in India Dr. P. BALACHANDRA Department of Management Studies & Centre for Sustainable."— Presentation transcript:

1 Climate Change Mitigation as a stimulus for Universal Rural Energy Access in India Dr. P. BALACHANDRA Department of Management Studies & Centre for Sustainable Technologies Indian Institute of Science Bangalore – 560 012

2 Motivation is to explore whether climate change imperatives be transformed as opportunities for expanding rural energy access in the India  Climate change mitigation is a necessity and India’s participation is inevitable; Is expanding rural energy access a low hanging fruit?  The market mechanisms created by international protocols have provided revenue opportunities for mitigation efforts; Whether these can reduce the cost of expanding rural energy access? Why rural energy access is a critical issue in India?

3 Only 55% of the rural population had access to electricity in 2005 and the remaining 45% relied on kerosene for their lighting needs. For cooking, only 8.6% of the rural population had access to LPG (cooking gas), 1.3% to kerosene and large share of 84% to biomass (firewood, agro- waste and cattle dung) in 2005. 726 million relying on biomass for cooking and 364 million on kerosene for lighting out of a total rural population of 808 million in 2005. The issue is even more critical Source: Estimated based on NSSO (2007); UNPD (2008)

4 Energy poor are also income poor. Rural poverty line in India is Rs. 447 MPCE (Planning Commission, 2009)

5 The trends are disheartening, especially with cooking energy access (based on National sample survey organization (NSSO) and Census reports)

6 The regional disparities in cooking access levels are vast Top 5 states have access levels in the range of 17- 28% and the worst 5 in the range of 2-5%. The progress during last 11 years is discouraging for failure states. This is true even for successful states

7 Rural electricity access situation is far better compared to cooking access Electricity access levels were in the range of 10-34% in failure states and in the successful states the range was 80-96%. Except for Uttar Pradesh other states are progressing well Even many focused programmes have failed to achieve desired results in failures states

8 Distribution of monthly average rural household electricity consumption in India (2005)  Average household electricity consumption per month in 2005 for electrified households  World – 213 kWh  USA – 956 kWh  China – 56 kWh  India – 56 kWh  India rural – 39 kWh  India urban – 78 kWh Estimated based on NSSO, 2007; MOSPI, 2007; MOSPI, 2006; EIA, 2008 and UNESCAP, 2009

9 Cooking energy access programmes - Outcomes MNRE programmes on biogas and improved cook stoves were technology centric approach aiming more on dissemination rather than expanding access. Success was measured in terms of numbers deployed rather than how many use. With cattle ownership and availability of adequate dung being the criteria for installation of biogas plants, the poor got excluded from the programme. Thus, government subsidy for installing biogas plants was targeted at rural high income families. LPG subsidy is directed at mostly middle class and rich. Kerosene subsidy is mostly for lighting and directed at urban poor for cooking. Nearly 40% of kerosene is diverted.

10 Electricity Access Programmes - Outcomes All programmes prior to RGGVY have failed to achieve the objective of universal access to electricity. Through RGGVY India could electrify only 23% of the targeted rural households during last four-years. As on 1 st January 2010, a total of about 9.4 million households are electrified. Though initial goal was to provide electricity access to all households and free connections to 23.4 million BPL households by 2009, the targets have been revised to free connections to 17.5 million BPL households by March 2012. The estimates suggest that rural household electrification level is likely to be about 64% by 2009 compared to 43.5% in 2001. Focus was mostly on “connectivity”. Energy problems are yet to be resolved. Unreliable and low quality supply

11 Expanding rural energy access: Opportunities 1. Need for climate change mitigation and associated opportunities 2. Large potential for renewable energy resources 3. Access to near-commercial renewable energy (low carbon) technologies 4. Pioneer in small and micro enterprises 5. Targeting the current government incentives

12 Need for climate change mitigation The global climate change regime requires India’s contributions in mitigating GHGs India cannot avoid participation citing the need for development. Non-participation might result in economic consequences. Expanding rural energy access is a “low hanging fruit” According to IEA’s reference energy scenario, India’s energy related CO 2 emissions are expected to increase from 1.3 Gt in 2007 to nearly 3.4 Gt by 2030 (IEA, 2009). The climate stabilization 450 ppm scenario requires India to reduce CO 2 emissions to 2.2 Gt by 2030 from 3.4 Gt. Rural energy access has a potential of up to 0.2 Gt.

13 Climate Change: Opportunities Market mechanisms like Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) created by international protocols allow mitigated GHG emissions to be traded in carbon market. CDM in its present form is not exactly suitable for rural energy access programme. It is too restrictive and preference is always for large scale and easy to implement GHG mitigation projects. Though sustainable development and conforming to national priorities are listed as critical factors for approval of a CDM project, these are not strictly adhered to in practice. Projects catering to the needs of poor and maximizing social wellbeing hardly attract attention of CDM market. Reforms in CDM are being proposed (IEA, 2009)  Sectoral crediting mechanisms - emission reductions at the sector level, relative to a pre-defined sector baseline.  Policy CDM - Government policies generating CERs related to renewable energy, efficiency standards, energy subsidy, etc.

14 Renewable energy resources Centralized energy supply alone cannot achieve universal access. Distributed energy systems relying on renewable energy sources will have to play significant roles. Among renewable energy sources, biomass appears to be most promising for India Hard or woody biomass for electricity generation  Woody biomass being used for cooking/heating is 200 MT  Energy forestry in wasteland (40 million hectares) is estimated to contribute 255 MT (million tonne) Soft biomass for biogas production for cooking  Soft biomass of 300 – 600 MT  Cattle dung of 450 MT

15 Renewable energy technologies Biomass combustion/gasification technology Bio-methanation or biogas technology Both are commercial and India has experience in large- scale dissemination of these technologies. Power generation potential is 60,000 MW Biogas potential is more than 100 billion m 3 /year (adequate for 275 million households). (Based on Planning Commission, 2005, MNRE, 2010, Ravindranath, et al, 2005, Vijay, 2006)

16 India; a pioneer in MSME sector Medium, small & micro enterprise (MSME) sector contributes to 8% of country’s GDP, 45% of manufactured output and 40% of its exports (MSME, 2010) As per fourth census of MSMEs; in 2006-07  26 million medium, small and micro industries  29% engaged in manufacturing and the remaining 71% in services  52% of the MSMEs are rural based  MSMEs have provided employment to 60 million people  This is second only to agriculture  Women employees account for 17% of the total employment  About 91% of enterprises are of proprietary type indicating the entrepreneurial qualities of the individuals

17 Targeting Subsidies Kerosene subsidy of Rs. 10 billion and LPG subsidy of Rs. 17 billion in 2009, total of Rs. 27 billion (US$ 0.6 billion) Kerosene and LPG under-recovery of Rs. 458 billion (under pricing) in 2009 (US$ 10.2 billion) Electricity subsidies are provided by the state governments and they were approximately Rs. 415 billion (US$ 9 billion) in 2006 (IEA, 2007) Nearly US$ 20 billion per year is available. Major portion of it can be made available as incentives for expanding energy access.

18 A proposal for Universal rural energy access Proposal targets 100% access to modern energy carriers for cooking and lighting by 2030, in 20 years starting from 2010. The energy needs are to be met with a judicious mix of supply from centralized (electricity grid and LPG) as well as decentralized renewable energy-based systems (electricity and biogas) It is assumed that a contribution of 50-70% would be from distributed and small–scale renewable energy technologies The rate of transition towards universal energy access is expected to be slow at the beginning and to pickup towards the end. Expanding rural energy access through decentralized energy systems would be based on market principles by adopting a public-private partnership driven business model approach

19 Universal Rural Energy Access For cooking and lighting  Total annual energy requirement of 1,300 PJ  Total investment over a period of 20 years is Rs. 1,650 billion (US$ 37 billion)  Total annual recurring cost is Rs. 236 billion (US$ 5.2 billion).  Annual GHG mitigation potential of 213 million tonne  Average GHG abatement cost of Rs. 1,830/tCO 2 e (US$ 41/tCO 2 e)  Lighting access is about US$ 205 per household  Cooking access is about US$ 120 per household

20 Implementation Framework Multi-stakeholder and multi-level implementation programme Enacting an exclusive integrated rural energy policy Creation of exclusive rural energy access authorities within the government system as leadership institutions Establishment of energy access funds to enable transitions from the regime of investment/fuel subsidies to incentive-linked delivery of energy services Integration of business principles to facilitate affordable and equitable energy sales to households and carbon trade Treatment of entrepreneurs as implementation targets and not millions of rural households

21 Similar to RGGVY with expanded scope More stakeholders Energy access authorities Energy access funds Business principles Entrepreneurs instead of franchisees Carbon markets Implementation framework

22 Micro-enterprise for energy services

23 Financial feasibility of Enterprises  Bio-methanation for cooking energy access  Biomass Gasifier and CFLs for lighting and lifeline energy access  A bundling intermediary (ESCO; Energy service company) for accessing carbon market

24 Bio-methanation enterprise Village with 200 households requiring 200m 3 capacity biogas plant/s. Total new investment (biogas plants, distribution system & stoves) is Rs. 1.6 million annual O&M cost of Rs. 0.21 million CO 2 e mitigation per year ranging from 214 – 415 tonne A micro-enterprise model with equity contribution of 20% and a soft-loan at 6% interest rate and a repayment period of 5 years. A profit (from carbon trade) sharing arrangement with ESCO with 98% for enterprise and 2% for ESCO. Household repayment of Rs. 20,000 (@ Rs. 100/HH/Month). At present CER rates of US$ 20/tCO 2, the enterprises will be able to make only marginal profits during the repayment period and this is expected to improve substantially after 5 years. Government to provide incentives to increase profitability of the enterprises from energy access fund.

25 Biomass-gasification enterprise Five villages with 1000 households requiring 65,000 kWh/year for basic lighting with efficient technologies. For economies of scale, a 100 kW biomass-gasifier is proposed with a generation potential of 530,000 kWh per year. Remaining 465,000 kWh will be used for other end-uses and productive livelihoods at higher tariff. Total new investment is Rs. 5.0 million and annual O&M cost of Rs. 0.35 million and input fuel cost of Rs. 1.6 million and same financial arrangements as that bio-methanation enterprise. CO 2 mitigation potential per year is 581 tonne assuming grid as the competing option Differential tariffs for various end-uses At present CER rates, the enterprise would be under loss during the first 5 years and making significant profits afterwards.

26 Profitability measures Enterprises  Biogas-DungBiogas- Biomass Biomass Gasifier Entrepreneurs IRR39%14%25% NPV (Rs.)1,730,000315,0003,300,000 ESCO (Intermediary) IRR69%47%86% NPV (Rs.)12,260,00014,700,0009,300,000 Enterprises12522575

27 RHEES Project Rural Hybrid Energy Enterprise Systems (RHEES) – Proof of concept – Energy enterprises with profit + equity – Biomass methanation & Gasification based systems in selected villages – Integrate by-product based enterprises to enhance affordability levels of the rural poor – By-products – surplus energy, fertilizer, fiber, mushrooms, pest repellant, etc. Resources are more than adequate  US$ 24 billion/year versus an investment of US$ 37 billion and expenditure of US$ 5.2 billion/year  Energy resources – Requirement is less than the prevailing biomass consumption Policies and Institutional mechanisms are already available 600,000 micro-enterprises; 2 million employment and 4,500 ESCOs, and by-product based enterprises, employment, livelihood and business

28 THANKS


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