NEWS Providing a jolt of support to power the minigrid market

Pro­vid­ing a jolt of sup­port to pow­er the mini grid market

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Staff from Mera Gao Pow­er install a solar-pow­ered micro­grid in India. Indi­an Prime Min­is­ter Naren­dra Modi is among the donors and pol­i­cy­mak­ers posi­tioned to help the min­i­grid mar­ket real­ize its poten­tial in emerg­ing mar­kets. Pho­to by: Anna da Cos­ta /​ CC BY-NC-ND

Indi­an Prime Min­is­ter Naren­dra Modi and Unit­ed States Pres­i­dent Barack Oba­ma announced Tues­day two new ini­tia­tives mobi­liz­ing up to $1.4 bil­lion to finance India’s com­mit­ment to uni­ver­sal ener­gy access.

Min­i­grids are renew­able ener­gy-based elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­a­tors that serve a set of con­sumers. They make up a major part of Modi’s promise to pro­vide elec­tric­i­ty to all Indi­ans by 2019. Many have asked whether min­i­grids could be the next big oppor­tu­ni­ty beyond the grid. And with this influx of cap­i­tal, Modi is well-posi­tioned to put that ques­tion to the test as he looks to pow­er the more than 18,000 vil­lages that cur­rent­ly lack electricity.

Because there are far less sus­tain­able ways for India to meet its ambi­tious tar­gets, part of the path­way to the glob­al goal of uni­ver­sal access to elec­tric­i­ty by 2030, the stakes are high and the world is watching.

We believe that these remote areas which have been left out can­not be ser­viced with the reg­u­lar grid,” Tarun Kapoor, joint sec­re­tary of India’s Min­istry of New and Renew­able Ener­gy, said last week at Ener­gy­Ac­cessX, an event that took place in San Fran­cis­co as part of the annu­al Clean Ener­gy Min­is­te­r­i­al. He asked the audi­ence to pro­vide feed­back on a draft nation­al pol­i­cy out­lin­ing how micro­grids and min­i­grids can pro­vide cost effec­tive off-grid ener­gy. “We will have a mod­el of grid con­nect­ed micro­grids,” he said.

As the pol­i­cy acknowl­edges, while the world has seen tremen­dous growth of solar home sys­tems in the devel­op­ing world, bar­ri­ers con­tin­ue to stall the expan­sion of minigrids.

When you look at the actu­al expe­ri­ence with min­i­grids, it’s not just not as good as the poten­tial, but many have mas­sive­ly under­achieved,” said Dan Kam­men, a pro­fes­sor at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia, Berke­ley and a U.S. Sci­ence Envoy.

Min­i­grids are a more obvi­ous fit for areas where the con­cen­tra­tion of homes and busi­ness­es is too far to con­nect to the exist­ing grid but large enough to pro­vide economies of scale. So it is hard­er for the min­i­grid sec­tor to take off in coun­tries with less pop­u­la­tion den­si­ty, let alone less reg­u­la­to­ry sup­port, than India. Tech­no­log­i­cal improve­ments and cost reduc­tions have helped min­i­grids over­come some of the bar­ri­ers they once faced, but devel­op­ment banks and aid donors play a key role in cat­alyz­ing the growth of the min­i­grid industry.

Scat­tered across the tables at Ener­gy­Ac­cessX were book­lets from Sier­ra Club and Oil Change Inter­na­tion­al giv­ing inter­na­tion­al pub­lic finance a big red F for dis­trib­uted clean ener­gy access. The rec­om­men­da­tions for mul­ti­lat­er­al devel­op­ment banks includ­ed increas­ing fund­ing for off-grid and min­i­grid clean ener­gy projects and mov­ing beyond pilot projects to incor­po­rate off-grid and min­i­grid lend­ing into core ener­gy portfolios.

Min­i­grids raise chal­lenges that more tra­di­tion­al devel­op­ment donor invest­ment prac­tices are not always well adapt­ed to con­front, said Justin Guay, cli­mate pro­gram offi­cer at the David and Lucille Packard Foun­da­tion in San Fran­cis­co. This is due in part to a dis­con­nect between the exper­tise and incen­tives of most devel­op­ment bank staff, who tend to focus on exten­sive due dili­gence for a small num­ber of large projects, and the new oppor­tu­ni­ties to reach ener­gy impov­er­ished cus­tomers, which require numer­ous small­er invest­ments with high­er risk.

Devel­op­ment fund­ing agen­cies can’t real­ly go out and fund a hun­dred $1 mil­lion dol­lar rur­al elec­tri­fi­ca­tion projects. The paper­work is mas­sive, there’s a vet­ting process for all con­stituents, and they want trace­abil­i­ty in terms of where all dol­lars are going and what pay­back is going to be,” Flu­idic Ener­gy CEO Steve Scharn­horst told Devex. The Inter­na­tion­al Finance Corp., the World Bank’s ven­ture cap­i­tal arm, has invest­ed in his clean ener­gy com­pa­ny, which is lever­ag­ing its met­al and air bat­ter­ies to store elec­tric­i­ty in renew­able ener­gy min­i­grids in emerg­ing markets.“If you can bring scale through a min­i­grid and do 100 vil­lages or 500 vil­lages and make it a con­sol­i­dat­ed finan­cial effort where the agen­cies are vet­ting a half dozen part­ners for a large invest­ment, it makes it eas­i­er to get done.”

The Glob­al Facil­i­ty on Mini-Grids aims to remove the bar­ri­ers con­strain­ing the expan­sion of low cost, clean ener­gy min­i­grids in emerg­ing mar­kets, Mal­colm Cos­grove-Davies, glob­al lead for ener­gy access at the World Bank, told Devex.

The group will host an event focused on min­i­grids in Nairo­bi, Kenya, lat­er this month to eval­u­ate suc­cess­ful min­i­grid projects. It will eval­u­ate suc­cess­ful min­i­grid projects to under­stand what has worked from tech­nol­o­gy to pol­i­cy to finance. Case stud­ies might include the Infra­struc­ture Devel­op­ment Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed pro­gram in Bangladesh, which has been called the most suc­cess­ful off-grid pro­gram in the world. Events such as these rep­re­sent one way the glob­al devel­op­ment com­mu­ni­ty can ral­ly mar­ket actors around a com­mon vision and build momen­tum for min­i­grid mar­ket growth, said Kristi­na Skier­ka, cam­paign direc­tor of Pow­er for All, a key orga­niz­er of EnergyAccessX.

For these suc­cess sto­ries to scale in Africa, min­i­grids must rely on cham­pi­ons who can mobi­lize the mon­ey need­ed to bridge the mar­ket imperfections.

I’m becom­ing increas­ing­ly obsessed with min­i­grids,” said Andrew Her­scowitz, coor­di­na­tor for the Unit­ed States government’s Pow­er Africa ini­tia­tive. He said it is incum­bent on donors and gov­ern­ments to give min­i­grids a chance to be a part of the solu­tion beyond India. “We have to try,” he said.

Her­scowitz named two part­ners in Beyond the Grid, a Pow­er Africa sub-ini­tia­tive, as exam­ples of com­pa­nies that are demon­strat­ing points of com­mer­cial via­bil­i­ty across mul­ti­ple places on the African con­ti­nent. He men­tioned Pow­er­hive, which part­ners with util­i­ties and inde­pen­dent pow­er pro­duc­ers to pro­vide micro­grid elec­tric­i­ty, and Virun­ga Pow­er, which devel­ops, invests in, and oper­ates rur­al dis­tri­b­u­tion grids.

In Tan­za­nia, Dev­er­gy, which deploys min­i­grid sys­tems for low income peo­ple in rur­al vil­lages, is part­ner­ing with Simu­so­lar, which pro­vides and finances ener­gy effi­cient appli­ances, to test out a com­bined offer­ing of micro­grid and off-grid sys­tems. Michael Kuntz, the San Fran­cis­co-based co-founder of Simu­so­lar, said this effort will serve as a case study for how the two approach­es are com­ple­men­tary rather than competitive.

Sim­i­lar­ly, he hopes the Indi­an gov­ern­ment will pro­vide data as it imple­ments its micro-grid and min­i­grid pol­i­cy. Its suc­cess will depend on the details, from how the sys­tem is designed and pre­sent­ed, to how incen­tives from stake­hold­ers are aligned, to how the prod­uct life cycle is man­aged, Kuntz said.

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