Thursday, August 27, 2015


Adani Enterprises may partner with another manufacturer, says a person familiar with the development


Original Post: Utpal Bhaskar, Live Mint
Photo: Bloomberg

New Delhi: Adani Enterprises Ltd’s plans to set up a $4 billion solar photovoltaic manufacturing facility in partnership with US-based SunEdison Inc. may come unstuck.
“It is not working out. Adani Enterprises may partner with another manufacturer,” said a person familiar with the development who spoke on condition of anonymity.
A second person aware of the development confirmed it, but asked not to be identified.
Spokespersons for Adani Enterprises and SunEdison didn’t respond to an email sent on 7 August and subsequent reminders seeking comment.
On 20 August, Reuters reported that the Adani Group was in talks with Japan’s SoftBank Corp. and Foxconn Technology Co. Ltd to secure investment in a $3 billion project to make solar cells and panels in the country. It added, citing an unnamed source, that Adani and SunEdison had ended their proposed partnership in June.
Meanwhile, SunEdison has been firming up its India strategy. It recently agreed to acquire Continuum Wind Energy Ltd, a Singapore-based company which owns and operates 242 megawatts (MW) of wind power plants in Maharashtra and Gujarat, besides a 170MW wind power unit under construction in Madhya Pradesh.
Also, it signed a long-term power purchase agreement with Tata Power Delhi Distribution Ltd to provide 180MW of electricity.
The National Democratic Alliance government has pushed renewable energy to the top of its energy security agenda and is looking to provide green power at less than Rs.4.50 per unit. India needs as much as $200 billion to meet its target of installing 100 gigawatts (GW) of solar power and 60,000MW of wind power by 2022.
The Adani-SunEdison facility was to be constructed in Mundra, Gujarat. A memorandum of understanding to the effect was signed in the backdrop of the seventh Vibrant Gujarat summit in January, inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Gandhinagar.
“The facility will create enough solar panels to fuel substantial solar growth in India, furthering India’s goals for clean, renewable energy independence, and will add up to 20,000 jobs to the local economy,” Adani Enterprises and SunEdison said in a joint statement on 11 January.
“During the first half of 2015, SunEdison and Adani will complete a comprehensive analysis of the joint venture opportunity and business plan. Pending successful outcome of the study, construction of the facility will begin shortly thereafter,” the statement said, adding, ‘The new $4 billion facility will be constructed in Mundra, Gujarat, India, over a three to four year period. This facility will vertically integrate all aspects of solar panel production on site, including Polysilicon refining, ingots, wafers, cells and panels production with a broader ecosystem involving extended supply chain for raw materials and consumables,” the statement added.
There has been growing interest from overseas investors in the Indian renewable energy space. Russia’s OAO Rosneft, the world’s largest publicly traded oil company, US-based First Solar and China’s Trina Solar are among the firms looking for opportunities in India’s solar energy sector. In June, SoftBank, along with Bharti Enterprises Ltd and Taiwan’s Foxconn Technology, proposed to invest at least $20 billion in solar energy projects in India through a joint venture, SBG Cleantech Ltd.
According to the government, the Indian clean energy market is largely driven by asset-based finance to the extent of 94% of the total investment in the sector.
In India, the world’s biggest greenhouse gas emitter after the US and China, renewable energy currently accounts for only 13%, or 35,777MW, of the total installed power capacity of 2,74,818MW.
Analysts believe that local manufacturing of solar power generation and transmission equipment will play an important role as the country builds up its solar energy capacity.
“The associated industry of solar cell manufacturing, power storage and transmission equipment technology cycles are contracting, and finance needs to evolve accordingly to provide a definitive boost. A short-term financing approach focuses only on current technologies which have shorter shelf life and expects higher returns. Alternatively, investors now need to finance businesses not products, adopting a long-term approach, as it is the adaptability of business to environment and technologies’ that form the pillars of success,” Yes Bank Ltd said in a 19 August report.

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