Rooftop solar capacity installations in India registered a 26 percent year-on-year decline to at 367 megawatts during January-March period, mainly on account of rise in input cost, according to Mercom Capital.
The country witnessed 485 megawatts (MW) of rooftop solar installations during the first quarter of 2023, the research firm said in a report.
India added 367 MW of rooftop solar in the March quarter. Installations fell nearly 10 percent quarter-over-quarter from 406 MW and dropped over 24 percent year-on-year from 485 MW, the report titled 'Q1 India Rooftop Solar Market' said.
India's cumulative rooftop solar capacity was 10.8 GW as of March 2024.
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"The drop in installations was largely a result of application processing delays faced by residential customers due to oversubscription under the PM SURYA GHAR: MUFT BIJLI YOJANA programme. The rise in module prices to comply with domestic content requirements (DCR) further contributed to reduced capacity additions under the SURYA Gujarat programme," it said.
The industrial segment led quarterly capacity additions, comprising almost 57 percent of installations. Commercial, residential, and government segments accounted for around 28 percent, 14 percent, and 1.1 percent of capacity additions, respectively.
Mercom Capital Group CEO Raj Prabhu said, "Although rooftop solar is off to a slow start, 2024 could be a breakout year if the government's residential rooftop programme with attractive incentives. The challenge is on the supply side; a short supply of inverters and certain components, the availability of skilled labour, and concerns over the ability of installers and government agencies to handle the rush are keeping the sector up at night."
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Gujarat, Maharashtra, Haryana, Kerala, and Karnataka led the rooftop solar additions in the quarter. The top-five states accounted for more than 67 percent of the quarter's installations.