
Development banks to withdraw support for India’s PV sector
Nov. 11, 2011 - Chris Whitmore - pv-tech.org The US Government-sponsored banks that have helped
fund the takeoff of India’s fledgling solar
industry may soon move to withdraw their support,
according to an official at the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation (OPIC).
Peter Ballinger, OPIC’s director, has said
that the agency is rapidly approaching its lending
limit for PV projects in India and opined that multilateral
lenders like the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and
the World Bank (WB) could shortly be forced to reassess
their aid packages.
The ADB, WB and OPIC were among the first to invest
in developing solar in India. However, such has been
the success of the investment programme that projects
in the country now account for 8.5% of OPIC’s
total loan book, nearing its 10% limit for any one
country.
India hopes to complete its first
round of large-scale PV installations by January, and is planning to hold
an auction for a further 350MW of projects later
this month. In October Moser Baer installed India’s
largest system to date, a 30MW
system in the state of Gujarat, and national capacity now stands at 125MW.
Ballinger believes that, with the industry maturing,
the time is right for development banks to start
withdrawing support. “We’re supposed
to be catalytic for new industries by providing financing
at an early stage until more traditional lenders
get comfortable with the risks of new technologies
and businesses they’re unfamiliar with,” he
said. “It may be time for commercial banks
to step in to India’s solar sector now that
it appears to be ramping up."
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