ADVERTISEMENT

India Is Changing The Way It Is Lighting Its Homes

UJALA scheme had set a target of replacing 77-crore incandescent lamps with LED lamps by March 2019.

 A worker demonstrates various light-emitting diode (LED) filament-style bulbs at the Havells India Ltd. manufacturing plant in Neemrana, Rajasthan, India. (Photographer: Udit Kulshrestha/Bloomberg)
A worker demonstrates various light-emitting diode (LED) filament-style bulbs at the Havells India Ltd. manufacturing plant in Neemrana, Rajasthan, India. (Photographer: Udit Kulshrestha/Bloomberg)

Mithilesh Kumar, who runs a small electrical shop in Delhi’s Gujranwala area, has seen the sales of incandescent electric bulbs fall drastically over the past few years. “People prefer LED bulbs as the prices have declined significantly. Eight months ago, a 9W LED bulb was selling for Rs 160, but now it costs Rs 90.”

That comes after the Modi government’s push to energy-saving bulbs in Indian homes through the UJALA—Unnat Jyoti by Affordable LEDs and Appliances for All—scheme launched in 2015. It set a target of replacing 77-crore incandescent lamps with LED lights by March 2019. So far, state-run Energy Efficiency Services Ltd. has distributed 35.5 crore.

The company, however, said overall target has been exceeded with the help of private manufacturers. “EESL replaced 35.5 crore LED bulbs and the private sector replaced about 111.66 crore till December 2018,” Saurabh Kumar, managing director at EESL, told BloombergQuint. “When we started the programme, there was no private sector activity in LED space. If we were to do everything, then we would’ve become a monopoly.”

UJALA isn’t new though. EESL had floated the first tender to procure LED lamps in January 2014, before the Modi government took over, under the Domestic Efficiency Lighting Programme. The tender was won by Eco Light with a price of Rs 310 per LED bulb of 7 Watt. This scheme was later re-branded as UJALA. Competition and higher volumes brought prices further down, according to Kumar.

Price Falls

LED lamps now cost about one-eighth of the price four years ago. “Because of competitive bidding, the LED lamps now cost Rs 42 each compared with Rs 300 in 2015,” Kumar said.

Under UJALA, every household with a metered connection can replace their conventional bulbs with LEDs either by paying EMIs to their utility provider or through an upfront payment.

Ramesh Kumar, 55, a resident of Derawal Nagar in Delhi, said he switched to LED lamps and tube lights four to five years ago. “I use them at home because they save electricity and are brighter,” he said. The cost, he said, is similar to a traditional bulb but is more energy efficient. "A 40-watt conventional tube light costs Rs 240, as much as an 18-watt LED tube light.”

India’s LED lighting market stood at $918 million in 2016, according to research and consultancy firm TechSci Research. While the LED lighting market grew at 36 percent in 2017, LEDs accounted for 54 percent of the share by value, according to Electric Lamps and Component Manufacturers Association of India. Data for the period after that isn’t available yet.

The government claims that its UJALA scheme has saved 45,119 million kilowatt hour of energy every year, leading to Rs 18,048 crore in cost saving annually.

EESL said it has also recovered the amount it had spent on the scheme, adding that the company garnered a revenue of Rs 4,000 crore in the last four years under the programme. “We are getting the returns through volumes. When you are pushing something for 1 lakh in numbers, then your per item earning is much higher, according to Kumar. “The revenue was almost Rs 1,000 crore per year. We had invested around Rs 3,500 crore for the whole programme.”

Opinion
Government Again Extends Deadline To Submit Bids For Biggest Solar Tender