Two virtual conferences on 10th Edition WIND POWER IN INDIA & 3rd Edition BIOMASS POWER IN INDIA

Organisers:
10th Edition Wind Power in India
Supported by:
3rd Edition Biomass Power in India
Sponsor:
Delegate benefits (Virtual Conference)
- Direct interaction with senior speakers (Q&A facility)
- Easy connectivity to geographically dispersed delegates (click of a mouse)
- Concise report offered as a backgrounder
- Cost effective (lower ticket price as compared to a physical conference)
- Offers flexibility and convenience
- Access to conference recording
- Recap of conference sessions
- Contributes to sustainability and lower carbon footprint
INR | GST @ 18% | Total INR | USD | |
1 Login | 9,000 | 1,620 | 10,620 | 150 |
2 – 3 Logins | 15,000 | 2,700 | 17,700 | 250 |
4 – 5 Logins | 21,000 | 3,780 | 24,780 | 350 |
6 – 9 Logins | 27,000 | 4,860 | 31,860 | 450 |
10 – 20 Logins | 33,000 | 5,940 | 38,940 | 550 |
INR | GST @ 18% | Total INR | USD | |
1 Login | 6,000 | 1,080 | 7,080 | 100 |
2 – 3 Logins | 10,000 | 1,800 | 11,800 | 170 |
4 – 5 Logins | 14,000 | 2,520 | 16,520 | 240 |
6 – 9 Logins | 18,000 | 3,240 | 21,240 | 300 |
10 – 20 Logins | 22,000 | 5,400 | 25,960 | 370 |
For registration process/payment to attend any one conference, please contact:
Raymol Reji
Email: raymol.reji@indiainfrastructure.com
Tel: +91-8076218925, 9582232031
- GST @18 per cent is applicable on the registration fee.
- Registration will be confirmed on receipt of the payment.
Benefits of sponsorship (Virtual Conference)
- E-Meet influencers and decision-makers
- Reach out to and engage with new or active prospects
- Generate high quality sales leads
- Increase brand recognition
- Target a captive and engaged audience
- Drive website traffic through social media promotions
- Position your company as the thought-leader in your industry
For sponsorship and delegate registrations, contact:
Raymol Reji,
Email: raymol.reji@indiainfrastructure.com
Tel: +91-8076218925, 9582232031
The conference is being organised by India Infrastructure Publishing, the leading provider of information on the infrastructure sectors through magazines, newsletters, reports and conferences. The company publishes Power Line (India’s premier power magazine) and Renewable Watch (covers the entire spectrum of renewable energy), Power News (a weekly newsletter), and series of research reports on Wind-Solar Hybrid, Competitive Bidding for Wind Projects, Waste to Energy, and Industrial Solar Market in India. It also publishes the Wind Power Directory and Yearbook.
Organisers:
WIND POWER IN INDIA
TNERC, Tata International, THDC, Thyssenkrupp, Toyota Kirloskar, Trimble, Ultratech Cement, UN-ESCAP, UL India, Ushdev Power Holdings, Underwriters Laboratories, Ushdev International, Van Oord, Vestas, WAPCOS, Wartsila, Windforce Management, World Wind Energy Association, WindWorld, Yes Bank, etc.
BIOMASS POWER IN INDIA
ACC Cement, Air Liquide, APTransco, Aries Power Systems, Bermaco Energy Systems, Chanderpur Works, Cheema Boilers, Clark Energy, Development Environergy Services, Enerzea Power Solution, First Energy, Forbes Vyncke, Fortum India, Green Infra, Greenko, HESCOM, Hindalco, ICICI Bank, IEX, Indian Biomass Power Association, Indian Energy Exchange, Intelligent Energy, IREDA, Kalpataru Power, Kochhar & Co., KRBL, Malpura Biopower, MERC, Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, NVVN, Oil India, Orient Green Power, P J Mehta & Associates, Panera Biotec, POSOCO, Praxair, Precision Engineering, PTC India, Punjab Energy Development Agency (PEDA), ReNew Power, Sinewave Power, SREI Infrastructure Finance, Star Wire (India) Vidyut, Usher Agro, Vermeer, etc.
For registration and sponsorship opportunities contact:
Raymol Reji
Email: raymol.reji@indiainfrastructure.com
Tel: +91-8076218925, 9582232031
WIND POWER IN INDIA
- India’s wind power market is evolving fast amid the chaos and confusion created by the ongoing
- The short-term impact of the pandemic has been a slowdown in wind power capacity Wind power installations in the first half of 2020 stood at a mere 324 MW, a significant decline from 1.2 GW capacity in the first half of 2019. This can be largely attributed to lockdown measures, transport restrictions and supply chain disruptions brought upon by Covid, as well as transmission-related hurdles.
- From a medium- to long-term perspective, however, there have been several positive The latest round-the-clock (RTC) and hybrid renewable energy tenders received a substantial response. Wind power plays a vital role in such projects due to its generation profile.
- The ongoing localisation drive, which has led to an increase in project and equipment prices across many sectors, has had a minimal impact on wind power project The wind supply chain is already localised in India to an extent of 80-85 per cent by value, and major components being imported are limited to castings and power electronics.
- Further, the wind supply chain is gearing up to increase its competitiveness in Wind OEMs like Siemens Gamesa, Nordex, Inox and Suzlon have already announced or launched over 3 MW of platforms for the country. The increasing competitiveness of wind can unlock a larger pipeline and reinvigorate the interest of developers and offtakers in the industry.
- There have been encouraging developments on the policy and regulatory front as The MNRE granted a must-run status to all renewable energy projects to ensure offtake. States like Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu have recently issued policies to incentivise the development of wind energy projects and export the excess power to other states.
- A key emerging trend in the space is that IPPs are moving towards a self-sufficient operations and maintenance strategy in order to maximise efficiency and reduce Digitalisation has emerged as a key part of this strategy as it enables remote monitoring.
- The mission of this one-day virtual event is to study the impact of Covid on wind market dynamics, examine the new opportunities, assess the impact of recent policy and regulatory initiatives, discuss the risks and challenges, and showcase the latest innovations, most promising technologies and noteworthy
BIOMASS POWER IN INDIA
- In a significant development, India surpassed the target of achieving 10 GW of biopower-based installed capacity in early 2020, two years before the planned timeline. The current installed biopower generation capacity, including bagasse- and non-bagasse-based cogeneration/captive power and waste-to-energy (WtE) projects, stands at over 10,100
- The main driver of this growth has been biomass In comparison, the WtE segment has been slow to pick up, but holds considerable potential in the country given the quantum of waste generation.
- The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has introduced various programmes for promoting the bioenergy segment in It provides central financial assistance under these programmes for project development, programme implementation, information dissemination and trainings. These include the New National Biogas and Organic Manure Programme, the Biomass Power and Bagasse Cogeneration Programme, and the Biomass Gasification Programme. The Biogas-based Power Generation (off-grid) and Thermal Energy Application Programme (BPGTP) is also being implemented for 3-250 kW capacity plants.
- In early 2020, the MNRE revised the guidelines for its WtE A new addition to the guidelines was the inclusion of municipal solid waste- based projects based on the clarification by the Department of Expenditure. The objective of the programme is to set up projects based on biogas or bio-CNG, urban, industrial and agricultural waste, captive power, and thermal gasification in industries. It also promotes the setting up of projects for the recovery of energy from municipal solid waste, which can be fed into the grid and used for meeting the captive power, thermal and vehicular fuel requirements.
- Bioenergy offers over 200 GW of largely untapped power potential, but the segment has been growing at a slow A key issue is the absence of an organised market for biomass. Due to the lack of fuel supply agreements/linkages, companies cannot accurately forecast fuel price movements. Moreover, fuel costs have nearly doubled in the past couple of years, but the feed-in tariffs have not been revised accordingly.
- In order to promote growth in the segment, a variety of measures are Scalable business models (such as biomass-based microgrids, round- the-clock renewable energy and energy storage-based biomass) and enabling policy frameworks can provide the much needed boost to the segment and help addres the country’s growing waste disposal problem.
- The mission of this conference is to highlight the opportunities, challenges and risks in the biomass segment, and examine the solutions and It will also provide a platform for sharing experiences and deliberating on the policy and regulatory support needed to promote biomass- based power development.
WIND POWER IN INDIA
WELCOME REMARKS |
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SECTOR TRENDS: NEW DEVELOPMENTS AND REVISED OUTLOOK |
Questions/Topics:
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KEYNOTE ADDRESS: MNRE’s PERSPECTIVE: ENABLING PROJECT SUPPLY AND DEVELOPMENT |
Questions/Topics:
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SPECIAL SESSION: SECI’s TENDERING STRATEGY AND DIRECTION |
Questions/Topics:
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INDUSTRY CONCLAVE: KEY LESSONS FROM COVID-19 CRISIS |
Questions/Topics:
Panel discussion among (in alphabetical order):
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MADHYA PRADESH PERSPECTIVE |
Questions/Topics:
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RRECL PERSPECTIVE |
Questions/Topics:
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STATE OF DISCOM FINANCES: IMPACT ON PPA CREDIBILITY AND POWER OFFTAKE |
Questions/Topics:
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OFFSHORE WIND: WHEN WILL IT BECOME VIABLE? |
Questions/Topics:
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RENEWABLE ENERGY HYBRIDS AND ENERGY STORAGE |
Questions/Topics:
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INVESTOR AND LENDER PERSPECTIVE |
Questions/Topics:
Remarks and Interaction with:
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BIOMASS POWER IN INDIA
WELCOME REMARKS |
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KEY TRENDS AND OUTLOOK |
Questions/Topics:
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KEY PLAYERS’ PERSPECTIVE: EMERGING BUSINESS MODELS AND STRATEGIES |
Questions/Topics:
Panel discussion among (in alphabetical order):
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KEYNOTE ADDRESS: POLICY AND REGULATORY PERSPECTIVE |
Questions/Topics:
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IREDA PERSPECTIVE |
Questions/Topics:
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TARIFFS AND COST ECONOMICS |
Questions/Topics:
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BIOMASS-BASED MICRO-GRIDS |
Questions/Topics:
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STATE FOCUS |
Questions/Topics: 1 hour 20 minutes
Presentations by (in alphabetical order):
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PROJECT SHOWCASE |
Questions/Topics:
Presentations by:
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Wind Power in India
The speakers so far include:
- Bhanu Pratap Yadav, Joint Secretary, Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE)
- Sanjay Dubey, Principal Secretary, Madhya Pradesh
- Ashish Tiwari, Managing Director, Vena Energy
- Parveen Nanda, Senior Vice President, Greenko Group
- Chintan Shah, Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency (IREDA)
- Sanjay Kumar Singh, General Manager, Project Finance, State Bank of India
- B.K. Panda, Scientist E, MNRE
- Hitesh Sachdeva, Partner, KPMG India
- Rajneesh Sharma, Director, Deloitte
- Sabyasachi Majumdar, Senior Vice President, ICRA
Biomass Power in India
The speakers so far include:
- Dinesh Dayanand Jagdale, Joint Secretary, MNRE
- Manoj Sinha, CEO, Husk Power
- Col RohitDev (Retd), Chief Operating Officer, PRESPL
- Pankaj Patel, President, Abellon Clean Energy
- Harish Kumar, Head, Engineering Services, Development Environergy Services
- Bhuvnesh Patel, Chief Engineer, MPUVNL
- Sanjeev Jain, Chief Engineer, CREDA
- Col Sumeet Malhan, SM (Retd), Chief Technology Officer, PRESPL
- Sabyasachi Majumdar, Senior Vice President, ICRA
For speaking opportunities, please contact:
Neha Mathur
Email: neha.mathur@indiainfrastructure.com
Mob: + 91 8826000927
WIND POWER IN INDIA
The conference is targeted at officials and managers from
- Power producers (gencos)
- Power distributors (discoms)
- Power transmission companies (transcos)
- IPPs and Wind farm developers
- Wind turbine manufacturers
- Capital and maintenance dredging firms
- Equipment manufacturers
- Technology providers
- Operations and maintenance companies
- Renewable energy development agencies
- Carbon fund investors and managers
- Energy storage and system integration experts
- Design and engineering organisations
- Financial institutions and other investors
- Insurance companies
- Legal and consulting firms
- Research and certification agencies
- Regulatory and other government agencies, etc.
BIOMASS POWER IN INDIA
The conference is targeted at officials and managers from
- Biomass project developers
- Biomass equipment manufacturers
- Supply chain management organisations
- Regulatory and other government agencies
- State electricity development agencies
- Testing and certification agencies
- Research institution and organisations
- Financial institutions and investors
- Project advisory firms
- Carbon fund managers
- EPC contractors
- Off-grid players
- Technology providers
- Discoms and gencos
- Captive power users