Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan and Maharashtra are yet to clear payments to wind power producers.
These states, along with Madhya Pradesh (MP), have also asked power producers to curtail generation by 50 per cent or more. Wind power producers operating in these states include Suzlon, Enercon, Gamesa, ReNew Power, Hero Future Energies, Orange Wind Energy, NuPower Renewable, NSL Renewable and Inox Energy. Rajasthan has asked producers curtail generation by close to 40 per cent and Tamil Nadu around 20-30 per cent. The period of peak wind power generation matches peak demand during summer. “Lack of inter-state transmission capacity is hurting our generation plans. The consumer cannot make most of the surplus wind power available during summer,” said an industry executive.
“The decline in interest from states is partly due to the falling tariffs of solar power. No state wants to pay more than ~5 per unit for wind power as competitive bids in solar projects spiral down. MP recently decreased its feed-in tariff for wind power to below ~4.5 per unit,” said Amit Kumar, partner (energy and utilities), PwC India.
Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat and Rajasthan are not signing new power purchase agreements, leaving investors in a limbo. “We might see some agreements from Telangana, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, but the existing capacity faces threats,” said an industry executive.
The Maharashtra government was also mulling a surcharge on captive wind power generation, said companies operating in the state. Officials said the matter was under consideration and no decision had been taken.
