"Solar power auctions have benefited immensely. It's (wind power auctions) on the way, its on the anvil. In fact I have just come from a meeting where I was telling my officers to speed that up," the New and Renewable Energy Minister said at a discussion at the Economist India summit here.
He further said: "Over the years, the wind people were so used to the feed-in tariffs that they were resisting it on the ground that its distributed all across small units, it won't work. But, I realise that pricing that you get out of these feed-in tariffs is never going to be the most optimal tariff."
"So wind is suddenly started facing the wind of solar and their pricing is becoming unviable so now they are coming back to me and are ready and willing to go for the auctions," Goyal, who also holds the charge of Power, Coal and mines Ministries, said.
On high prices in the coal auctions impacting firms, he said: "I did not set the auction price. It was a free and frank and transparent and open auction. And everybody was free to bid who wanted the coal. I never asked the companies to bid a particular price more or less. I didn't interfere."
"I think its a fair deal. You can't have a deal where the private sector is smart while they make money and they are not smart and it's my duty to bail them out when they lose money."
On increasing share of renewable energy in India's energy mix, the Minister said government has set a target achieving 40 per cent of installed capacity through renewables and reduce the carbon intensity of the GDP by 30-35 per cent by 2030.
On climate change and India's role in it, Goyal said the country has its own development imperatives like bringing around 40 per cent of its population out of poverty, feeding the hungry, creating jobs and physical infrastructure.
India, though on path of reducing carbon intensity, would require some room in order to boost to its manufacturing sector, which in turn would ride on the back of coal generated power in the near future, he explained.
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