STARTUP
SPECIAL Here Comes the Sun
Azure Power is a pioneer
of sorts in solar power, but it now has to reckon with deep-pocketed
competitors
Inderpreet Wadhwa, founder
of Azure Power, comes with a compelling pedigree. Born and educated in India he
moved to the US where he did his MBA from the University of California,
Berkeley.He went on to hone his entrepreneurial skills in Silicon Valley, where
he lived for a decade and worked at a raft of tech ventures.
It was in 2007, when on a
personal trip to India, that the startup bug bit and solar fever struck.
“Talking to government folks here made me feel there was enormous potential (in
the solar energy sector),“ he recalls. Even the challenges -both internal and
external -were enormous. There was no regulatory framewor for solar power in
India then. Cost structures were steep. But the bigge challenge came from his
father. “He was extremely skeptical and didn't want me to leave a cushy career
in the US for the grind here,“ Wadhwa recalls.
Today, all that is history,
thanks in a large part to India's well-structured national solar policy, which
has set an aggressive target of 1,00,000 MW from solar power by 2022, from just
3,000 MW in December 2014. Wadhwa's ambitions are on a similar track. His
pure-play startup is “one of the most successful and oldest players that has
managed to get funding from reputed investors like International Finance
Corporation,“ says Vinay Rustagi, manag ing director of consultancy firm Bridge
to India. Azure has close to 250 MW of solar capacity and about 515 MW in the
pipeline across 14 states, much of it in Punjab. As for his father, “after I
won a contract I turned him around; he is now on board,“ says Wadhwa.
Investors look at Wadhwa as
a pioneer in the sector. “He entered solar when it did not exist in India.
Azure is well positioned to build 5 GW of solar in three to five years,“ says
Sanjeev Aggarwal, cofounder of Helion Venture Partners, and an investor in
Azure.
The renewable energy space
is a $250-billion investment opportunity in India, according to some estimates.
With the Modi government backing renewable energy to the hilt, the sector can
be expected to get plenty of policy support to smoothen the glitches. So, from
beefing up the grid network and setting up solar parks, to regulating tariffs
and working out mechanisms to insulate solar power producers from indebted
electricity boards, a slew of initiatives are in the works. Further, with
better solar technology and dipping costs, solar power is almost reaching grid
parity, increasing its appeal. Azure Power faces two big challenges, one of
them being the winner's curse. What many call irrational exuberance, aggresive
bidding is driving tariffs to unsustainable levels in the sector. The latest
winning bid in Andhra Pradesh was at `4.63 per unit, which could raise
viability concerns. “This concern has been there in every bid in the last three
to four years,“ says Santosh Kamath, head of renewable energy, KPMG in India,
seeking to allay such fears. Two, the sector is seeing the arrival of big
money, from the likes of SoftBank (with access to cheaper funds), which wants
to invest $20 billion in solar projects in India. So relatively smaller players
like Azure will be up against it. Rustagi, for his part, reckons Azure will
hold its own.“This is just the tip of the iceberg. I think different players
will find their niches.“ Well networked in India, Azure will be equipped to bag
and execute smaller projects that are unattractive to large players and also
tap niches like rooftop projects, which it is eyeing aggressively.
ETM3JAN16
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