Solar
energy, in a limited way, has started powering telecom towers, bank branches,
data centres and ATMs in power deficient rural India and areas faced with
erratic supply of grid power.
Companies
providing equipment for power back-up and solar power producers have confirmed
that this trend is catching up with support from government as well as telecom
companies and banks which are opting for clean and uninterrupted energy.
“We
are providing solar inverters of smaller ratings to ATMs. More than ATMs, our
concentration is bank branches. At present, the adoption of solar power in the
banking sector is at a nascent stage, but it is aggressively picking up,” Sunil
Khanna, President and Managing Director, Emerson Network Power, told The Hindu.
Asked
to quantify the number of ATMs running on solar power, he said: “It will be
difficult to give a number, but one can expect solar power ATMs to populate
Tier-3 and Tier-4 cities in the near future. We see great business potential in
this sector going ahead. Some of the ATMs that are running are located in the
rural areas of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.”
He
said in the banking sector there had been a shift from traditional data centres
to data centres in a box which were cost-effective solutions and fell in the
realm of ‘plug and play’. In rural areas, solar energy was being preferred to
run data centres, he added.
Emerson
Network Power, a part of $24.7 billion American conglomerate Emerson, is into
back-up power system, among others.
More
than banks, telecom companies have adopted solar energy to power telecom
towers.
“At
present, we are powering more than 20 telecom towers and by April1 2014, the
number will go up to 40. From one micro solar power plant site, we are powering
three towers of different companies,” Sushil Jiwarajka, Chairman, Omnigrid
Micropower Co. Pvt. Ltd., told The Hindu. He said his company, a micro power
producer, had been setting up solar power plants costing about Rs.75 lakh in
inaccessible areas targeting telecom towers as anchor customers.
“We
are providing surplus power to banks, schools, petrol pumps and even households
in the locality to make our project viable,” he added. Omnigrid, which has now
solar plants in Uttar Pradesh, is gearing up to enter Bihar, Jharkhand, West
Bengal, North East, Madhya Pradesh and J&K which face acute power shortage.
Telecom
Regulatory Authority of India’s (TRAI’s) requirement for telecom companies to
use renewable sources of energy for powering 50 per cent of their telecom
towers in rural areas is helping.
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