Virtual Conference on Stationary Energy Storage in India(SESI) - 8 April 2021

09 03 2021 | 13:09

IESA is organising a focused Virtual Conference & Expo on Stationary Energy Storage in India on 8th April 2021. We have invited, MNRE, MoP, NITI Aayog, CERC, CEA, POSOCO, NSGM, BIS, SECI, NTPC, Indian Oil, HPCL, Utilities, DISCOMs, State Load Dispatch centres, state nodal agencies and most of the active renewable (solar, Wind) players, storage project developers and energy storage, inverter, power electrics companies and others. Please find the details mentioned below. We encourage you to consider participating in this event. Feel free to reach me for any queries.

 

The confirmed participating organisations include AES India Private Limited, AIIB, AutoGrid, Ampere hour energy, BASF, Bharat Energy Storage Technology Pvt Ltd, Bosch, BSES Rajdhani, Cancrie, D Force Solar and Energy pvt ltd, D R Enterprise, Elevation Energy, EOS Energy Storage, Epsilon Advanced Materials, EXICOM, Exide, Fortum, Genus Power, Grinntech Motors & Services Pvt Ltd, h2e Power Systems Private Limited, HPCL, IFC, INPower Clean Energy Insurance, Jakson, J B Securities, Kore Power, Lucas TVS, Larsen & Toubro Limited, MSS India, Nexcharge, NREL, Oxto Energy, Pastiche Energy Solutions, Paschim Group, PIXII, Renew Power, Renon India Pvt Ltd, Savitribai Phule Pune University, SB Energy, Schaltbau India, SECI, Shreenath Smart Technologies Pvt Ltd, Sosaly Technologies, Sj enginners renewable energy, Sterling & Wilson,Torrent Power, Toyota Kirloskar, TVS-Lucas, UL, Veena Energy, Vflowtech, Vimano, VSL Ventures, Wartsila and others.

             

Early Bird Registration: CLICK HERE (Valid till 26 March 2021)

 

Stationary Energy Storage in India (SESI2021) Conference & Virtual Expo

8th April 2021

Platinum Partner- Nexcharge || supporting Partner: NSEFI, IGEF, ISGF

Magazine Partner: ETN || Powered By : Customized Energy Solutions

 

The government of India has come up with an ambitious plan to deliver 450 GW of renewables by 2030, committing to generate 40% power from clean energy sources by 2032. In Union budget 2020, government announced its plan to retire old thermal plants that are not able to meet environmental regulations. Recent results from SECI tender for RE+ storage have shown that hybrid RE projects can compete with thermal plants for providing reliable peak power. In addition, government is also working on 24*7 Power for all and there is a growing realization of need for microgrids in achieving this goal in a cost effective and timely manner. High deployment of renewable energy and its use requires technical as well as commercial solutions and a variety of policy decisions around minimizing the impact of intermittency and enabling grid integration of renewable energy.

 

IESA estimates the energy storage market in India to be US $2.1 billion in 2019 and forecasts a CAGR of 8% by 2027. In 2019, the market size shrunk to 21 GWh from 24GWh last year, primarily due to lower sales in the larger markets such as telecom and inverter batteries in 2018.

 

In next 7 years, the top growing markets for ESS are renewable integration into the grid, diesel optimization, solar rooftop, and distribution utility scales storage. Renewable integration into the grid is slated to grow at CAGR of 32% by 2027 due to the focus on solar-wind hybrid tenders by Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) and other government agencies, due to high renewable target of 450 GW by 2030. Diesel optimization is a key sector on account of for diesel genset usage for more than 3-4 hours a day and is slated to grow at CAGR of 59% in short term till 2023, with a slower growth in long term at 30% till 2030 accounting for a more reliable national grid which may leave less scope for the growth of backup application market. For the rooftop solar market, a dip in GST from 28% to 5% has been a driver for the market, with analyses additionally showing that for solar resource-rich states like Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, West Bengal, Assam, cost of rooftop solar with 50% storage system could meet grid parity by end of 2023. COVID-19 slowed down the growth of the market, but towards 2027 the market is likely to be a strong supporter of energy storage technologies. Another top market for energy storage is Distribution Utility market, with top private DISCOMs such as BSES and TPDDL in Delhi already in different stages of Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) installations. The strain on DISCOM’s due to a higher penetration of solar rooftop, EV charging stations, and ever-increasing C&I loads can be supported by energy storage technologies. This fact is likely to become more apparent in the long term with the market size potentially increasing to about 6 GWh in 2027.

Currently, the forecasting, scheduling and DSM are the only drivers for wind integration application. Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) plans to introduce market mechanism for ancillary services market. IESA suggested the Commission to introduce ESS for secondary and fast tertiary regulation ancillary services as it provides faster response and more regulation per MW. In 2019, the first large grid-scale ESS project was commissioned at Tata Power Delhi Distribution Ltd (TPDDL), Rohini Substation in New Delhi for 10 MW – 10 MWh for application such as peak load management, frequency regulation and Energy shifting. In 2020, NLC and L&T also commissioned another project at Andaman Nicober with a capacity of 16 MW-8 MWh for solar integration.

 

Rooftop PV policy subsidies, falling battery prices, increase in the electricity tariffs, energy storage with rooftop solar all are expected to pick up in the short term. The rural electrification sector majorly constitutes the solar home lighting systems under Saubhagya scheme, solar streetlights under AJAY scheme, and microgrids. In 2018-19, market was driven by Saubhagya SHLS deployment; however, the sector looks unattractive due to lack of policies existing in the market to drive it beyond 2021.

 

Presently, India has already installed 25+ MWh of large-scale storage for grid and renewable integration though pilot and demonstration projects at different locations. Apart from these commissioned projects, 100+ MWh of energy storage projects in India are on the verge of tender allocation or at construction stage. IESA is hopeful, that this time the government will prioritize energy storage projects and see them through to implementation.  We are also seeing strong leadership from private commercial and industrial consumer to develop storage projects for behind the meter applications for different commercial and industrial hubs to create private projects.

 

With the same intent, we are delighted to announce the Stationary Energy Storage in India (SESI) Conference & Virtual Expo on 8 April 2021 focused on the roadmap and outlook for stationary energy storage in India. This is a unique platform to interact, network and learn about market landscape, government policies, new projects & tender updates, Insights from national and international storage projects, current and future technology outlook for stationary storage.

 

Confirmed speakers:

 

v  Shri Ghanshyam Prasad, Joint Secretary in Ministry of Power, Government of India

v  Dr. Bharath Reddy, Additional General Manager, Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI)

v  Amy Rose, Energy Analyst, NREL

v  Mani Khurana, Sr. Energy Specialist, The World Bank

v  Rajat Misra, Acting Director General, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)

v  Shriram, Deputy General Manager, Sterling & Wilson

v  Dr. Satyajit Phadke, Manager – R&D, Customized Energy Solutions

v  Dr. Rahul Walawalkar, MD – Customized Energy Solutions, President, IESA

v  Dr. Judy Jeevarajan, Research Director-Electrochemical Safety, Underwriters Laboratories Inc.

v  Debi Prasad Dash, Executive Director, IESA

v  Jitendra Nalwaya, Vice President – BSES Yamuna Power Limited

v  Nilesh Kane, Head- Power Distribution and Battery Energy Storage. Tata Power Delhi Distribution Limited

v  Dr. Avishek Kumar, Co-founder & CEO, V-flow Tech

v  Srinivasa Rao Ganga, Chief Marketing Office – Industrial Battery division, Amararaja Batteries

v  Naveen Sharma, Vice President – Sales & Strategy planning, Exicom

v  Vinayak Walimbe, VP – Emerging Tech, Customized Energy Solutions

v  Michael Willemot, Chief Financial Officer, Oxto Energy

v  Avanthika Satheesh, Industry Research Manager, Customized Energy Solutions

v  Shivam Chauhan, Research Analyst, Customized Energy Solutions

 

*See attached the Agenda

 

 

26 March 2021

SESI

 

 

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