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Indian renewables companies urge a pause on auctions due to backlog

A presentation by the industry shows that India's renewable producers have urged the government to stop new project auctions, until stranded energy projects find buyers.

Three major industry groups made a rare presentation jointly to the federal energy and renewables ministries. They said that more than 42 gigawatts (gigawatts) of auctioned power capacity has yet to be awarded contracts for power supply.

Grids in the top-producing renewable states Gujarat and Rajasthan reject some green energy from operational projects - this is known as curtailment.

The National Solar Energy Federation of India, the Sustainable Projects Developers Association and the Wind Independent Power Producers Association have all stated that delays in the upcoming transmission lines could lead to further curtailments.

According to one attendee, senior government officials said that bidding couldn't be stopped?abruptly. However, they agreed to accelerate efforts to reduce curtailments through resolving the technical constraints.

The participant declined to be identified as he wasn't authorised to talk to the media. The federal ministries of power and renewable energies did not respond immediately to requests for comments.

The power ministry said previously that it wanted to?accelerate the signing of contracts by speeding up interstate transmission lines. Meanwhile, the ministry for renewable energy has partially blamed curtailments due to a slowing in power demand growth.

Avaada Energy has not yet found buyers for the 9.5 GW capacity that it won at auctions. The presentation stated that ReNew Power was looking for buyers for 5GW and JSW Group, 2.7GW. The companies didn't immediately respond to our requests for comments.

The industry groups called for the appointment of renewable energy experts to key regulatory agencies, and added that there was confusion caused by multiple agencies having overlapping technical standards.

They said that "various bodies?across the eco-system continue to be dominated?by conventional power system expertise."

The report also highlighted repeated delays in the transmission infrastructure. One project received five extensions of deadlines on requests for progress reviews every month.

(source: Reuters)