Shared facilities reduce per-MW costs by 15-20%. Common substations, roads, security.
Consolidated evacuation lines, single grid connection. Simpler compliance.
Economies of scale. Land ₹8-12 lakhs/acre (vs ₹15-20 independent), infrastructure shared.
Pre-cleared land, simplified approvals. Developers move faster from land to operation.
Attract multiple developers. Collective critical mass benefits all stakeholders.
Significant renewable capacity addition. Employment generation, local economic development.
Market & Policy Assessment
Land Identification & Acquisition
Pre-Feasibility Study
Solar Resource Study
Master Plan Development
Infrastructure Design
Environmental & Regulatory Approvals
Land Preparation
Central Infrastructure Installation
Utilities Development
Inspection & Certification
Developer Onboarding
Park Operations
Financial Case Study: 500 MW Solar Park Development
Land & Development Costs:
LAND ACQUISITION:
– Area: 10,000 acres (500 MW capacity)
– Land cost: ₹10 lakhs/acre (negotiated bulk rate)
– Total land cost: ₹10,000 × ₹10 = ₹100 crores
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT:
– Central substation (330 kV): ₹50 crores
– Evacuation line (50 km @ ₹1 crore/km): ₹50 crores
– Access roads (500 km @ ₹20 lakhs/km): ₹100 crores
– Internal utilities: ₹30 crores
– Buildings & facilities: ₹20 crores
– SCADA & IT infrastructure: ₹10 crores
– Contingency (10%): ₹30 crores
Total Infrastructure: ₹290 crores
TOTAL PARK DEVELOPMENT CAPEX: ₹390 crores
Cost Per MW: ₹390 crores ÷ 500 MW = ₹0.78 crore per MW (Solar projects typically ₹1.35-1.40 crore/MW standalone)
Developer savings: ₹0.55-0.60 crore per MW from shared infrastructure!
Park Revenue Model:
ANNUAL REVENUE (500 MW park at 100% occupancy):
Land Lease Income:
– Annual lease: ₹3 lakhs/acre/year
– 10,000 acres: ₹30 crores/year
– Escalation: 3% annually
Infrastructure Charges:
– Per MW evacuation charge: ₹5 lakhs/MW/year
– 500 MW: ₹25 crores/year
– Covers substation, transmission, operations
Water & Utilities:
– Per MW water charge: ₹1 lakh/MW/year
– 500 MW: ₹5 crores/year
Other Services:
– Security, maintenance, management: ₹5 crores/year TOTAL ANNUAL REVENUE: ₹65 crores
ANNUAL EXPENSES:
– Staff & operations: ₹5 crores
– Maintenance & utilities: ₹8 crores
– Property tax & administrative: ₹3 crores
– Insurance: ₹4 crores
Total Annual OpEx: ₹20 crores
ANNUAL NET PROFIT (EBITDA): ₹45 crores
25-Year Financial Projection:
Year 1-5: ₹45 crores/year × 5 × 0.95 = ₹213.75 crores
Year 6-10: ₹45 crores/year × 5 × 1.15 = ₹259 crores
Year 11-15: ₹45 crores/year × 5 × 1.35 = ₹303.75 crores
Year 16-20: ₹45 crores/year × 5 × 1.55 = ₹348.75 crores
Year 21-25: ₹45 crores/year × 5 × 1.75 = ₹393.75 crores
25-YEAR TOTAL REVENUE: ₹1,519 crores
25-YEAR TOTAL OpEx: ₹500 crores
25-YEAR NET PROFIT: ₹1,019 crores
AFTER CAPEX (₹390 crores):
NET 25-YEAR PROFIT: ₹629 crores
IRR: 25%+ (excellent infrastructure returns)
Payback: 8-9 years
Solar Park Master Planning:
TYPICAL 500 MW PARK LAYOUT:
Total Land: 10,000 acres
Land Allocation:
Central Infrastructure: 500 acres (5%
Buffer & Roads: 1,000 acres (10%)
PLOT ALLOCATION STRATEGY:
SHARED FACILITIES MANAGEMENT:
Central Substation:
SCADA Control Center:
Water Management:
Utilities Distribution:
Security & Access:
Developer Onboarding Process:
STEP 1: INITIAL INQUIRY (Week 1)
– Interested developers contact park management
– Provide capacity requirement (MW)
– Preferred plot size and location
– Basic developer credentials
STEP 2: SITE ASSESSMENT & ASSIGNMENT (Week 1-2)
– Park team conducts site tour
– Discuss available plots & options
– Select appropriate plot based on preferences
– Preliminary resource assessment
STEP 3: DOCUMENTATION & AGREEMENTS (Week 2-3)
– Execute land lease agreement
– Standardized terms & conditions
– Duration: 25 years (typical)
– Rate: ₹3 lakhs/acre/year (fixed or escalating)
– Termination & renewal clauses
STEP 4: TECHNICAL COORDINATION (Week 3-4)
– Grid connection queue assignment
– Interconnection point specification
– Load flow study approval
– Connection charges determined
STEP 5: COMMENCEMENT OF DEVELOPMENT (Week 4+)
– Developer receives plot possession
– Pre-developed infrastructure available
– Infrastructure use charges ($5 lakh/MW/year)
– Utilities billing commencement
– Regular status updates
STEP 6: COMMISSIONING & OPERATIONS (6-12 months)
– Park team facilitates commissioning
– Operational coordination
– Performance monitoring
– Maintenance support
TOTAL ONBOARDING TIME: 4-6 weeks (vs 6-12 months independent)
Standardized Developer Agreements:
LAND LEASE AGREEMENT KEY TERMS:
Land Specification:
– Plot size: 50 acres (example)
– Location: Block C, Plot #25
– Permitted use: Solar power generation only
– Duration: 25 years
Land Lease Rate:
– Initial: ₹3 lakhs/acre/year
– Escalation: 3% annually
– Total annual rent: 50 acres × ₹3 lakhs = ₹1.5 crores/year
Infrastructure Charges:
– Capacity: 20 MW (developer specific)
– Evacuation charge: ₹5 lakhs/MW/year = ₹1 crore/year
– Water & utilities: ₹1 lakh/MW/year = ₹20 lakhs/year
– Security & maintenance: ₹50 lakhs/year
Developer Obligations:
– Environmental compliance: Zero deviations
– Community engagement: Local employment priority
– Safety: ISO 45001 compliance
– Connectivity: Timely payment of all dues
Park Support:
– Land in development-ready condition
– Pre-laid infrastructure (power, water, roads)
– 24/7 monitoring and support
– Emergency response facility
– Dispute resolution mechanism
Park Management Structure:
SOLAR PARK MANAGEMENT ENTITY:
– Can be: SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle), Trust, or Authority
– Governance: Board of Directors (park owner + developer representatives)
OPERATIONS & MAINTENANCE:
– Infrastructure maintenance
– Utility management
– Security & surveillance
– 24/7 operations center
COORDINATION:
– Grid coordination for collective generation
– Developer support and liaison
– Regulatory compliance
– Community relations
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT:
– Billing and collection (lease + utilities)
– Expense management
– Financial reporting
– Reserve fund management
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT:
– Future expansion planning
– Technology upgrades
– Regulatory changes adaptation
– New developer recruitment
STAFFING (Typical for 500 MW park):
– Park Manager: 1
– Operations Manager: 1
– Electrical Engineers: 2-3
– Maintenance Staff: 5-8
– Administrative & Support: 3-5
– Security Personnel: 20-30 (contract)
Total: 35-50 personnel
Collective Developer Benefits:
ADVANTAGES OF MULTI-DEVELOPER PARK:
Cost Savings:
– Shared infrastructure: 15-20% CapEx savings per MW
– Bulk vendor discounts: 5-10% equipment savings
– Shared services: 20-30% OpEx reduction
Operational Efficiency:
– Centralized SCADA: Real-time optimization
– Collective load management: Better grid stability
– Shared expertise: Knowledge transfer
– Faster approvals: Single entity coordination
Market Strength:
– Collective bargaining: Better PPA terms
– Grid coordination: Larger aggregate capacity
– Policy influence: Stronger advocacy voice
– Developer ecosystem: Networking & collaboration
Environmental Management:
– Consolidated environmental monitoring
– Shared water management
– Collective sustainability reporting
– Combined CSR initiatives
Risk Mitigation:
– Diversified developer base: Risk spread
– Collective insurance: Better rates
– Shared contingencies: Emergency fund
– Redundancy in services
Case Study 1: 300 MW Solar Park – Rajasthan
Project Profile:
– Capacity: 300 MW (one of India’s largest solar parks)
– Location: Khimsar, Jaisalmer, Rajasthan
– Land: 6,000 acres
– Developer Base: 25+ independent solar companies
– Investment: ₹400+ crores (by all developers combined)
Park Development:
– Infrastructure capex: ₹150 crores
– Main substation: 330 kV
– Central SCADA: Advanced AI-based optimization
– Water management: Rainwater harvesting, recycling
– Employment: 500+ during construction, 150+ permanent
Financial Performance (Park Level):
– Annual land lease revenue: ₹18 crores
– Annual infrastructure charges: ₹15 crores
– Total annual revenue: ₹33 crores
– Annual OpEx: ₹8 crores
– Annual profit: ₹25 crores (Park operator)
Developer Benefits:
– Average CapEx savings: 18% per developer
– Average IRR: 18-20% (higher due to cost savings)
– Faster commissioning: Average 10 months (vs 14-16 independent)
– Support network: Collective learning
Regional Impact:
– CO2 offset: 360,000 tons/year
– Employment: 150+ permanent jobs
– Revenue to state: ₹50+ crores (lease + taxation)
– Model for replication: 5+ similar parks planned
SUCCESS FACTORS:
– Clear land acquisition upfront
– Efficient project management
– Professional developer mix
– Strong regulatory coordination