State-owned firm Indian Railways, which carries 23 million passengers everyday, is targeting 5GW of solar by 2025 in partnership with global development organisation UNDP.
Presenting at the International Conference on Decarbonisation of Indian Railways, Mission Electrification, Prodyut Mukherjee, national technical consultant, UNDP, notified that the target will be realised using vacant Indian Railways land and rooftop space, but it will need greater involvement from the private sector and increased investments as well as innovative low-risk business models.
Indian Railways currently spends a quarter of its income on energy bills amounting to US$5 billion each year. It already accounts for more than 2 per cent of India’s entire electricity consumption, consuming 2.6 billion litres of diesel annually.
UNDP has identified 8,500 stations and buildings with solar potential, with around 44,000 hectares of land banks
Indian railways already plans to reach 1GW of solar by 2020 as announced in February 2015. As part of its Vison 2020 scheme, it also plans hundreds of megawatts of wind power in this period.
In total, 500MW of solar will be placed on rooftops using Central Finance Assistance (CFA) from the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) with the other 500MW set for ground-mount.
In another presentation, Sudhir Garg, executive director, electrical energy management, Ministry of Railways, reported that 15MW of PV has already been deployed, with 218 railway stations installing rooftop systems.
Tendering for 50 MW of rooftop PV is underway and there are 100MW at the request for proposal stages, issued on 28 September.
Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) will oversee 190MW of ground-mount projects and Indian firm Central Electronics will facilitate 50MW.
There are already 40MW of wind power in operation.
By Shruti