India's
Prime Minister Unveils 'Solar Valley' Vision
A network of
'solar valleys', generating the know-how to realise India's
solar energy ambitions, has been mooted by its prime minister,
Manmohan Singh.
India's solar energy mission, launched
this week (11 January), is one of its eight core national
missions under a national action plan on climate change (see
'Doubts raised over India's plans for solar power'). The country
aims to generate 20,000 megawatts (MW) of electricity from
the sun by 2020.
"If the ambitious mission is to become
a living reality, we will have to create many 'solar valleys'
on the lines of the silicon valleys that are spurring our
information technology industry across the four corners of
our country," said Singh.
"These valleys will become hubs for
solar science, solar engineering and solar research, fabrication
and manufacturing."
Singh said technological innovation is
the key to the mission's success.
"We will need to find ways of reducing
the space intensity of current solar applications including
through the use of nanotechnology. Cost-effective and convenient
storage of solar energy beyond daylight hours will be critical
to its emergence as a mainstream source of power. In the meantime,
we may need to explore hybrid solutions, combining solar power
generation with gas, biomass or even coal-based power."
Yet several obstacles were pointed out
at a meeting of academic and industry experts in solar technologies,
organised to coincide with the mission's launch.
The country has so far only set up pilot
plants of one- or two-MW capacity, said Rajiv Arora, chief
executive officer of Moser Baer Photovoltaic's office in India.
Various projects in the pipeline could, at best, yield only
2030 MW by 2013, he said.
Yet India's goal for the first of its
three-phase solar energy plan is to achieve 1,100 MW of solar
power supplied largely through the national grid; seven million
square metres of solar collectors and 200 MW of off-grid solar
applications, by 2013.
In addition, India lacks sufficient stock
of the basic raw material crystalline silicon
and must import it if this massive scale-up is to work.
India must also train an estimated 100,000
scientists, engineers and technicians in solar energy by 2022.
"The biggest challenge is trained photovoltaic installers,
in operation and maintenance," said Arora. There is also
a need to set up more testing and validation labs.
Ingenious solar appliances that serve
rural India's needs for example, rural cash machines
will also be needed.
India's minister for new and renewable
energy resources Farooq Abdullah said the country will also
support research into reducing raw material consumption and
improving energy efficiency. A long-term policy of subsidies
and pricing of solar power will also be put in place.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 14 January, 2010

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