The Indian market has started to show signs of recovery in the previous financial year from April 2015 to March 2016. A survey carried out by Indian consultant Jaideep Malaviya found the newly installed collector area to have reached a total of 1.55 million m² (1.085 MWth). The share of vacuum tube based systems had been rising steadily and was almost 90 % of the overall low temperature solar collector market in 2015-2016. Assuming some of the older systems are non-functional, the cumulative market was 8.9 million m² in at the end of March 2016.
Source: MNRE up to and including 2013-2014, market survey by Jaideep Malaviya 2014-2015 and 2015-2016
As with the financial year before, Malaviya estimated the market volume of vacuum tube systems based on the number of tubes imported under all four HS codes (see the table below).
This number added up to 7,011,134 from all four Harmonised System (HS) codes, including imported tube parts and tubes in assembled systems. Most of these tubes have a diameter of 47 mm, a length of 1,800 mm and an active surface area of 0.133 m², which results in a total tube area of 932,480 m² for 2015-2016. The factor to convert vacuum tube into gross collector area is 1.5, which means that the around 7 million imported tubes correspond to around 1,398,721 m². A small percentage of around 2 % of imports was for non-solar thermal applications.
HS Code
Month
84191920
84199090
84199010
84191910
Apr 15
19,990
170,039
May 15
5,344
207,651
June 15
13,675
199,729
13,400
July 15
126,664
127,438
Aug 15
1,300
140,724
184,963
Sep 15
24,844
217,634
199,917
18,000
Oct 15
65,314
408,340
19,350
Nov 15
242,063
273,295
2,000
Dec 15
164,331
527,856
26,400
Jan 16
6,720
130,070
604,681
13,040
Feb 16
249,634
416,763
1,759,256
Mar 16
13,760
207,672
209,277
66,614
1,563,125
3,529,949
1,851,446
Data on vacuum tubes imported to India under various HS codes during 2015-2016
Source: Import statistics of Legumex Impex (www.zauba.com)
A brief survey among some of the leading flat plate collector manufacturers has revealed that their overall business had either gone down or had them barely sustaining, which means a lot of importers have been entering the market in the meantime. Locally produced flat plate collectors were a niche market in 2015-2016, with only 172,000 m² of those having been installed across the country.
There is also the overall feeling that plenty of sub-standard solar water heaters have penetrated the market. A strict enforcement of quality standards is urgently needed and the ones already devised by the Bureau of Indian Standards should be enforced immediately and become mandatory in order to ensure that only high-quality systems are shipped from abroad.
Electricity prices are still on the rise and solar collectors have proved themselves as the best energy-saving device for domestic water heating. Under these circumstances, the market is likely to witness an increase over the coming decade and with growing demand for vacuum tubes, domestic manufacturing should become viable and the industry should be taking full advantage of the incentives by the current government’s Make in India programme.
Jaideep Malaviya, an expert in solar thermal based in India (malaviya@solrico.com), contributed to this article.
Baerbel Epp
Bärbel Epp is Founder and Director of the German communication and market research agency solrico and editor-in-chief of solarthermalworld.org
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