We are a leading management consultancy company. The company is duly registered as per the companies act, having own website and having ISO 9001;2008 certification. Recently we have got International Quality Assurance Era Award from Geneva. We are switching over to another business and so we want to sell our company. It will be finalised as soon as we shall get the best price. Please offer your price.
Hi, We are interested to setup 1MW to 4MW plants in Karnataka. Looking for consultants, who can provide project estimate, execution plan, Opertaion & maintenance details etc. Intersted parties may contact for further details.
Solar power has not really caught on in India. This is a low intensity power source and I doubt whether it can be viable for larger projects. It is useful to light street lights, cook food etc. But I doubt whether it can really compete with the conventional sources of energy or even with the non conventional source like wind energy.
Re: Expensive, low intensity
by A Sriv on Dec 17, 2009 07:46 AM
Germany with 3 hours of sun is the leading producer of Solar energy. How can India with 5-6 hrs of sun be a low intensity source. For India solar is the way to go. We dont have huge sources of coal and our coal is of poor quality, nor we have enough petro etc. So combination of Solar, Wind and Nuclear will be the best option
Solar power plant is very costly(15 crores per MW)Wind energy is extreemely good (6crores per MW).At this juncture unless technology improved and cost pf PV panels reduced there is no meaning in investing solar power plants.
for a pitty 8.5 Rs. per unit what you are getting is in my views not an attractive proposal to make an investment of 17-18 crores were payback itself is more than 15 years. and then balance life of the plant not more than 10 years.
investment in less than 15-17 rupees i feel is not wise.
I am also much interested in solar energy but I have met many employees,even yesterday, of the ministry of recycled energy and they themselves have found it wastage of money as whatever the hype may be but in practical soalr energy is not successful till today.after one ~three years related tools/equipments used gets wasted,no use.
Re: employees of same deptt.
by g chandrasekaran on Dec 12, 2009 03:07 PM
I am also interested in this technology. Looking for venture capital- G.Chandrasekaran
People should ask the simple question- how come Chinese workers are paid more(almost four times their Indian counterpart) yet the products are much cheaper and better quality than their Indian counterpart? And this s not unique to solar panels but almost every other product.
Government should encourage, invest and should subsidies the solar based power solutions for home use.
Just imagine if we can make solar power for home use, that includes, personal, as well as, shared residential properties, then how much saving we can get.
Solar energy can be effectively used for: 1. Street lighting 2. Traffic signals 3. Lighting residential and commercial building corridor, basement etc. 4. Lighting government offices, as these are mainly used in day time only 5. Providing hot running water in day time for residential and commercial usage 6. Provide 1/2 lighting and hot water for individual residential properties
Intial cost of these installation can be reduced by giving tax breaks etc..and once popular, mass production will reduce the overall production and maintenance costs. In India we have sun 70-80% time, so we can use this technology easily and reduce our dependence on conventional energy sources.
One more interesting use of this technology will be charge batteries of electric or hybrid car, when it is parked in day time. That way we dont need to recharge it so often.