Debajit Palit
I have more than 20 years of experience working in the field of clean energy access, rural electrification policy and regulation, distributed generation, solar photovoltaic and biomass gasification. I joined The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), New Delhi (www.teriin.org) in the year 1998 and since then has handled more than 30 projects as Principal Investigator/Team Leader in the field of clean energy technology, resource assessment
Address: Noida, India
Address: Noida, India
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Papers by Debajit Palit
• Proper planning is needed in order to delimit the geographical areas for grid extension, mini-grids and offgrid solutions. Governments should take the lead in the planning process and ensure that plans are followed up.
• A forward-looking, consistent and stable policy and regulatory framework should be established, including a strong and independent regulatory authority and a level playing field for public and private actors when it comes to having access to subsidies and cross-subsidies.
• Sufficient financial flows to mini-grid systems are needed to attract private capital, while still ensuring that tariffs are affordable for the rural poor.
• Cheaper and higher tiers of energy access are required for
rural households living in dispersed settlements. Government and donor support should be integrated into efforts to reduce the costs for lower income households.
• Sufficient technical and organisational capacity should be made available locally to reduce operating and maintenance costs.
electricity-pricing debates, this study undertook a meta-analysis of existing WTP studies in the electricity sector and stakeholder interviews to examine and quantify the evidence on the willingness to pay for electricity supply in India. It compared these findings with the current electricity-pricing mechanisms to derive recommendations on future electricity pricing and subsidy policies. The need for this study emerged in the backdrop of the structural changes that are currently underway to ensure the viability of electricity distribution companies (discoms) in India, specifically to understand how much consumers would be willing or able to pay for electricity services, in favour of tariffs that reflect the ‘cost to serve’, and whether such willingness to pay alone can fill the revenue shortfall gap for electricity distribution companies.