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Indian summer wind

In India, there are two main regions, the states of Gujarat and Tamil Nadu, on the west coast, which are most likely to see activity, says Mark Leybourne, senior engineer at IT Power Consulting to the All Energy conference and exhibition in Glasgow in May. 

A consortium, led by the Global Wind Energy Council, called Facilitating ƶijϻ Wind in India, or Fowind, has been running a project over a couple of years to assess these areas, with involvement from Norway’s DNV GL. 

However, one of the big areas of uncertainty is offshore wind speeds in these areas, Leybourne says. A Lidar, a type of survey technology, was supposed to be put in offshore Gujarat in the summer but now likely October due to the monsoon season. 

Estimates put Gujarat’s offshore wind speed at about 7m/sec, Leybourne says. A series of zones have been set out and a process of zonal consenting has been started. Zone A, an area covering 1700sq km off Pipavav Port, is likely to be like first pilot project in coming years. There are established ports and existing offshore oil and gas capability, he says. 

“The first project is likely to be around 300MW,” he says, showing the scale of the ambition. “We have been working with the government on the supply chain and how to roll it out.”

Tamil Nadu, meanwhile, has higher wind resources. Measurements have shown 8-9m/sec. But, the waters are a lot deeper and there is a lack of grid and port facilities, Leybourne says.  “The local government is also a little less forthcoming towards offshore wind and spending money,” Leybourne says. Nevertheless, a Lidar is also due to be positioned offshore at the end of this year or later next.

Charles Yates, managing director, CmY Consultants, says the attraction of these areas are that it’s an open playing field for international players. For their first projects, the states are keen to get established technologies, so the barriers to entry are low, he says. ƶijϻ wind, in fact, could see a 26% compound annual growth rate, between 2016 and 2025, he says. 

“In 2-3 years’ time there will be open international tenders for two projects in Gujurat and Tamil Nadu where the government wants established players, with financing and technology expertise, to get involved,” he told All Energy. “There aren’t barriers to import kit, transformers etc. The key thing is for the first projects to work.”

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