1 / 17

Arnab Ganguly Project Officer CUTS Calcutta Resource Centre

D emand side management and R enewable E nergy In India : C apacity Building of CSOs (DREC project in West Bengal) 1 st REFERENCE GROUP MEETING 06 th February, 2012. Arnab Ganguly Project Officer CUTS Calcutta Resource Centre. Baseline Survey for West Bengal. Methodology -

adem
Download Presentation

Arnab Ganguly Project Officer CUTS Calcutta Resource Centre

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Demand side management and RenewableEnergy In India: Capacity Building of CSOs (DREC project in West Bengal)1st REFERENCE GROUP MEETING 06th February, 2012 Arnab Ganguly Project Officer CUTS Calcutta Resource Centre

  2. Baseline Survey for West Bengal Methodology - • Total Sample Size – 513 • Household – 210 • Agriculture – 56 • Industrial (SME) – 37 • Government Institutions - 53 • Commercial and Private Institutions – 70 • NGO/CSO - 87 • Number of Districts – 4 • South 24 Parganas (The Sunderbans area) - 204 • Cooch Behar - 106 • Nadia - 103 • East Midnapore - 100

  3. Baseline Survey for West Bengal Methodology – • Criteria for Choosing Districts – • Sunderbans (South 24 Parganas) ---- where RE initiatives have been undertaken • Cooch Behar --- isolated islands -----virgin territory for RE initiative • Nadia & East Midnapore ---- Grid Connected----higher relevance of DSM • Details • 4 districts – 10 territories (Blocks)--- 2 in each district; but in Sunderbans 4 blocks • 1 CSOs from each territory – 10 CSOs • 50 respondents in each territory --- 50x100= 500 responsdents • From each of the territories both Urban and Rural areas were surveyed

  4. Perception on Climate Change / Global Warming • 91% of the respondents are aware about Climate Change / Global Warming • Majority (64%) of the stakeholders believe that Climate Change is the most important issue compared to other contemporary issues. 82% of the CSOs are of the same opinion followed by Government Institutions (75%) • Rainfall Pattern, Agriculture and Health will be severely affected by Climate Change. 32% feel that all areas will be affected

  5. Perception on Renewable Energy • 92% of the respondents are aware about the various renewable energy sources. • On an average while urban respondents are more aware about Solar, Hydro and Wind sources, rural respondents were also aware about biomass and biogas sources • Perception on Cost of RE • 39% of the respondents felt that the cost of RE was low, which contradicts the general perception - Out of the total off-grid consumers, majority (63%) felt the cost to be low • 25% of total respondents feel the cost to be very high. 43% are unelectrified consumers are of the same opinion - Which means the untapped market’s wrong perception needs to be changed • Out of this 130 respondents who feel the cost of RE to be High – 65 respondents had suggested that government should provide more subsidy and another 71 respondents advocated for increased investment on R&D

  6. Perception on Renewable Energy • Willingness to Pay • 79% of the respondents are will pay extra for getting reliable electricity supply but not beyond 5-10%. • The pattern shows that from the income category of 75,000 – 1,00,000 the willingness to pay increases proportionately with income group • Awareness and Usage of RE Equipments by HOUSEHOLDS • 62% of the respondents were aware of equipments run on RE. Interestingly the level of awareness was found to be higher for rural areas (66%) rather than for urban areas (53%).

  7. Reasons for Not Using RE Equipments by HOUSEHOLDS • 66% of the non user Households told that initial investment is high • Out of the households who are aware of the solar equipments, 89% of the respondents are willing to install it if provided appropriate financial assistance from local banks • 17% of the non-users told that the post sales service of the RE equipments is not reliable

  8. Problems Facing RE users in West Bengal • Majority of the RE users have complained that there are no Service centres nearby and Repairing takes about time (2-3 months). • The perception of 78% of the offgrid consumers was that Heavy Electrical Appliances like Fridge cannot be run on RE and they would shift to conventional grid connectivity. This made some offgrid solar consumers shift to grid connected conventional electricity in Nadia. In one of the unelectrified islands in Cooch Behar respondents were eager to install rooftop solar panels but could not do so. This is because some other residents in a nearby island had installed the same but those became defunct after 3 months and could not be repaired.

  9. Demand Side Management • Quality of Service • While 77% of the Grid Connected consumers have reported to have been suffering from Voltage Fluctuation and Power Cuts, 52% of the off-grid consumers told that they do not face voltage fluctuation • Cooch Behar (88%) and Nadia (81%) are the greatest sufferers of both Voltage Fluctuation and Power cut • Judicious Use of Electricity • 81% of the respondents believe that judicious use of electricity can help in reducing voltage fluctuation and power cut. • Media has been the main source of information for all the stakeholders especially through small advertisements broadcasted over Television. • 82% of the respondents believe that use of energy efficient products can help reduce electricity bill

  10. On Demand Side Management…….(contd.) • Awareness about Energy Efficient Products – HOUSEHOLDS • 80% of the Households are using energy efficient products. However understanding about energy efficient electrical products is limited to use of CFL and Tubelights • Only 36% of the households are aware of Star Label and/or BEE label. The rest 64% are not aware on how to identify energy efficient products. The level of awareness is lower for rural areas. • Non availability of Energy Efficient Products and Lack of awareness about the benefits - two main reasons for not using energy efficient products. • Commercial Consumers • 67% of the commercial consumers are not aware about BEE label. • Awareness about BEE label is higher for urban (20%) rather than rural areas (6%) • Out of the 33% of the commercial consumers who are aware about BEE label, 60% came to know through media, 38% from Electricity Distribution Company and 2% through BEE • 62% of the commercial consumers are not aware about Energy Audit and the rest 38% never conducted Energy Audit

  11. Agricultural Community in West Bengal • 72% of the farmers use irrigation pumpsets between 8 a.m. and afternoon • Only 25% of the farmers are aware about lower tariff at night • Inspite of knowing that tariff at night is lower than day, they are not using the pumpsets in the day time since – “that is the time when water should be given and not at night” as quoted by one of the respondents • Only 2 farmers is using energy efficient pumpset (having a BEE label), though 36% are aware about energy efficient pumpsets. • However the perception is very skewed. Farmers using diesel and Kerosene use Chinese pumpsets which consume less fuel. This is their concept of energy efficient pump and not with the BEE labeled pumps. The local shops, company advertisements and feedback from fellow farmers are promoting these pumpsets

  12. In West Bengal, agriculture sector is one of prime consumers of fossil fuel (Kerosene, Diesel) especially in areas where government is not giving permission to set up electrical pumpsets Approximate calculation of the amount of diesel used in one season (3 months) In the Radhanagar Gram Panchayat (Gosaba) there is 7,000 bigha (apprx) that is cultivated 3 times a year. Other than the monsoon season irrigation water is pumped and used in Boro (summer) season. A well to do farmer uses 100 liters of diesel/kerosene each bigha in one season. This means in the boro season 7,00,000 (apprx) liters of diesel/kerosene is burnt in one Gram Panchayat.

  13. Solar Pumpset for Irrigation • Though 27% of the respondents were aware about existence of Solar pump sets ,yet none was found to be using it. • Majority of the Farmers expressed interest in solar pumpsets, yet they had the following questions – • Will the solar pumps be able to give average performance of a 5 - 7.5 horse power pumpset? • What will be the quality of its after sales service? • According to the respondents 53% do not know where the solar pump sets are available

  14. Experience and Awareness among CSOs • 91% of the CSOs did not have any prior experience of working on issues pertaining to RE and DSM. 71% of the CSOs have cited Lack of funding, 28% have cited lack of capacity and 8% as lack of consumer interest as the reason for not working on these issues • 87% of the CSOs are not aware about the existence of a regulatory body in the electricity sector. • 76% of the CSOs are not aware about the Electricity Act, 2003 and the role and responsibility assigned to the CSOs • Two Case Studies in West Bengal • Absence of a regulatory structure jeopardises the long term feasibility of RE initiatives – Gosaba and Moushani • Innovative RE inititaives adopted by one of the local partners in Cooch Behar – distribution of hearing aid where the battery is charged through solar chargers

  15. THANK YOU

  16. Some Basic Information on Sample Composition

  17. Interpretation • 70% of the respondents were from rural areas and 30% from Urban areas. • Out of the total respondents 23% (120 respondents) were using RE in off-grid areas. • 73% of the respondents were Grid Connected Consumers • 4% of the respondents were unelectrified consumers • 62% of the total sample were having an income between 20,000 – 1,00,000 and were educated upto High School or beyond • 23% of the sample had an income of Rs1,00,000-5,00,000 and were highly qualified • The remaining 15% of the respondents have income below 20,000 or Uneducated THE SURVEY TRIED TO CAPTURE THE PERCEPTIONS OF DIFFERENT INCOME GROUPS AND DIFFERENT TYPES OF CONSUMERS - GRID CONNECTED, OFF GRID AND UNELECTRIFIED

More Related