|
|
||||
| Indian
Solar Loan Programme Overview
Approximately seven in ten rural households are still without access to electricity in India. These households continue to rely on less efficient and polluting energy sources, typically kerosene, to the detriment of their social and economic development as well as the environment. In Karnataka, even when grid electricity is available, problems of capacity shortages and inconsistent quality plague the power supply. This has led households to look to alternative power supply systems such as solar PV, inverters and diesel generators. Despite high initial costs, Solar Home Systems (SHS) emerge as an attractive option in the context of costly or unreliable alternatives and escalating grid power tariffs, and therefore a growing number of households are turning to SHS as a matter of necessity and convenience. An initial barrier to this growth was the With decentralized services starting to become available in rural
and peri-urban areas, accessibility becomes less a A survey of stakeholders revealed that there is a strong demand for Solar Home Systems (SHS) but that lack of availability of credit is a major barrier to meeting this demand. Banks do not yet have enough confidence in the technology to include SHSs in their standard lending portfolio. The survey indicated the need for a scheme to help banks begin providing consumer access to credit. This inititiave has established, in partnership with the two Indian banking groups Canara Bank and Syndicate Bank, two loan programmes for solar home systems that use UN and Shell foundation Resources to buy down the initial financing costs of lending to this sector. The purpose is to establish this as one of the standard products in the lending portfolio of financial institutions. The loans are accesible to customers of established solar rural electrification companies. The effort targets the electrification of twenty thousand homes and small businesses. This impact will increase as rural finance institutions build confidence and begin to increase retail and commercial lending to the solar energy sector. In the long-term, this will help bring modern and reliable electricity services to Indian households and enterprises in an environmentally sustainable manner.
|
|
|||

