Key Points

The government has introduced revised biomass guidelines to streamline approvals and boost bioenergy adoption. Key changes include reduced paperwork, IoT-based monitoring, and flexible sales agreements. The new rules aim to support MSMEs while tackling stubble burning pollution. These updates align with India’s 2070 net-zero emissions target.

Key Points: India Eases Biomass Rules to Boost Bioenergy and MSME Growth

  • Simplified documentation cuts approval delays for biomass plants
  • IoT monitoring replaces costly SCADA systems for MSMEs
  • Flexible sales agreements replace rigid long-term contracts
  • Performance-linked subsidies ensure efficient project funding
3 min read

New biomass guidelines to boost bio-energy, ease of doing business

New MNRE guidelines simplify approvals, reduce paperwork, and promote digital monitoring to accelerate biomass adoption and ease business operations.

"This change will save time, and promote ease of doing business. – Ministry of New and Renewable Energy"

New Delhi, June 28

In a bid to promote cleaner energy solutions, ease of doing business and accelerate the adoption of biomass technologies across the country, the government on Saturday issued revised guidelines for the biomass programme.

The new norms have been released under Phase-I of the National Bioenergy Programme, applicable for the period FY 2021–22 to 2025–26.

Under the new framework, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has simplified several processes, such as cutting down on paperwork and easing approval requirements, which will enable the industry especially MSMEs to enhance their production.

One of the major highlights of the revision is technological integration by enabling the use of IoT-based monitoring solutions or quarterly data submissions instead of expensive and high-tech systems like SCADA.

This cost-effective step promotes digital monitoring and accountability, especially for smaller business operators, said the ministry.

The guidelines also encourage significant simplification of documentation requirements. Developers of briquette and pellet manufacturing plants will no longer be required to submit number of documents related to clearance matters.

“This change will save time, and promote ease of doing business,” according to the ministry.

In a move to enhance operational flexibility, the earlier requirement for a two-year briquette or pellet sale contract has been replaced with a general sale agreement. This change will allow project developers to respond more dynamically to market conditions without being constrained by long-term contracts.

The amended guidelines rules allow flexible selling of biomass products, meaning businesses no longer need long-term contracts to get started.

Furthermore, the subsidy disbursement mechanism under the Central Financial Assistance (CFA) component has been made performance-based and transparent. Projects that run efficiently, above 80 per cent, will receive full financial assistance, while below 80 per cent will receive on pro-rata basis.

The performance inspection period has been simplified. Earlier, it has to be done within a period of 18 months from the date of commissioning, but now, it can be carried out within 18 months period either from the commissioning date or from the date of In-principle approval, whichever is later.

Additionally, to cater on-ground operational challenges of developers, Secretary, MNRE may extend the time period.

During inspection, performance report was made on the basis of Operation Plant at an average of 80 per cent of rated capacity measured over a period of three consecutive days, taking average 16 hours per day.

“However, now it has been reduced to just 10 hrs as the inspection process primarily aims to verify the claimed and operational capacities and inspection for 10 hours continuous operation would suffice this purpose,” said the ministry.

Recognising the urgent need to address air pollution, especially from stubble burning in northern India, the new guidelines include a provision allowing biomass pellet producers in Delhi, Punjab, Haryana, and NCR districts of Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh to choose the most beneficial support scheme, either from MNRE or CPCB.

These changes align well with improvement of stubble management and India’s broader goal of reaching net-zero emissions by 2070.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone from Punjab, I welcome the special provisions for stubble burning solutions. But will the subsidies actually reach farmers? We've seen good policies fail at implementation before.
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Aditya G
The IoT-based monitoring is a game changer! This shows India is embracing smart tech for sustainable development. Kudos to MNRE for thinking about both environment and business needs.
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Sarah B
While the guidelines are progressive, I'm concerned about monitoring. Reducing inspection hours from 16 to 10 seems too lenient. How will quality be maintained? Sometimes shortcuts compromise long-term benefits.
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Karthik V
Great move! The performance-based subsidy is brilliant - reward efficiency. This will push entrepreneurs to maintain quality while scaling up operations. More such policies needed for green energy sector!
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Nisha Z
As a small business owner in UP, these simplified norms are a blessing! Earlier the documentation was nightmare. Now maybe I can finally expand my biomass unit. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

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