Operational Guidelines For ‘PM-Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana’

Syllabus: GS2/Government Policy and Intervention; GS3/Energy

Context

projected-growth-in-installations-under-pm-surya-ghar

PM-Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana

  • About: It was launched with the aim to promote the use of rooftop solar power in residential sectors under the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE).
  • Key Features:
    • Subsidy and Financial Assistance: Offers a subsidy of up to 40% to reduce the upfront cost of rooftop solar installations.
    • Payment Security Mechanism: Guarantees timely payments through DBT to vendors and installers, encouraging more participation from the private sector.
    • Capacity Building and Training: Aims to create 3 lakh skilled manpower through fresh skilling and up-skilling programs.
    • Ease of Application: The ‘National Portal for Rooftop Solar’ streamlines the application process.
  • Model Solar Village: The “Model Solar Village” component aims to establish one solar-powered village per district across India, promoting energy self-reliance and solar adoption. ₹800 crore has been allocated, with ₹1 crore for each village.

Key Components of the Recent Guidelines

  • Payment Security Mechanism (PSM): A ₹100 crore corpus fund has been established to de-risk investments in Renewable Energy Service Company (RESCO) based grid-connected rooftop solar models in the residential sector.
    • This fund may be supplemented through other grants, funds, and sources after due approval from the Ministry.
pm surya ghar
  • Implementation Models:
    • RESCO Model: Third-party entities invest in rooftop solar installations, allowing consumers to pay only for the electricity consumed without bearing the upfront costs.
    • Utility-Led Aggregation (ULA) Model: DISCOMs or state-designated entities will install rooftop solar projects on behalf of individual residential sector households.
  • Central Financial Assistance (CFA): Aims to support 1 crore residential consumers in installing rooftop solar systems.
India and Renewable Energy
Total Electricity Generation Capacity: 452.69 GW (October 2024);
1. Renewable Energy: 203.18 GW (about 46.3% of total installed capacity), surged from 178.98 GW in October 2023.
2. It aligns with the country’s ambitious renewable energy target of achieving 500 GW from non-fossil sources by 2030.
India’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) target to achieve about 50% cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel-based energy resources and to reduce the emission intensity of its GDP by 45% from 2005 level by 2030.
Solar Energy in India
– About 5,000 trillion kWh per year energy is incident over India’s land area with most parts receiving 4-7 kWh per sqm per day.
National Institute of Solar Energy (NISE) has assessed the country’s solar potential of about 748 GW assuming 3% of the waste land area to be covered by Solar PV modules.
National Solar Mission (NSM) is one of the key missions in India’s National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC). 

Source: PIB