The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has issued revised guidelines under the National Bioenergy Programme for Waste-to-Energy (WtE) projects. This amendment is set to enhance efficiency, ease of doing business, and enable performance-based Central Financial Assistance (CFA) for developers while aligning with India’s sustainability targets.
The key change in the revised guidelines lies in the shift towards performance-based CFA disbursal. Earlier, developers received CFA only after achieving 80% of plant performance, but the updated rules now allow a split-release model. Initially, 50% of the total eligible CFA will be released upon receiving the Consent to Operate from the State Pollution Control Board, against a bank guarantee.
The remaining CFA will be granted once the plant achieves either 80% Plant Load Factor (PLF) or the maximum eligible capacity, whichever is lower. If plants underperform, pro-rata CFA may be granted for outputs above 50% PLF, but projects generating below 50% will receive no CFA support.
To foster growth in the bio-energy sector, especially among micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), MNRE has reduced compliance burdens by cutting back paperwork and relaxing approval norms.
This step makes it easier for entities to produce compressed biogas (CBG), power, and biogas from organic waste, including industrial refuse and agricultural stubble. These process enhancements aim to improve waste management and contribute to India’s net-zero carbon goal by 2070.
The revised norms redefine the inspection process to be more credible and transparent. Joint inspections will now be led by the National Institute of Bio-Energy (SSS-NIBE), along with a choice of one other agency, such as State Nodal Agencies, Biogas Technology Development Centres, or any MNRE-empanelled body. For developers not seeking advanced CFA, only a single performance audit is required, cutting down procedural bottlenecks.
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Under the updated framework, developers can now claim CFA within 18 months from the project's commissioning date or the date of in-principle CFA approval, whichever comes later. This extension addresses real-world commissioning delays and enhances financial viability for developers during the critical start-up phase.
MNRE's revised WtE guidelines are a progressive shift towards aligning financial support with actual project performance. By simplifying procedures, improving inspection integrity, and enabling flexible CFA disbursal, the new rules are set to boost investor confidence and accelerate India’s transition to clean, sustainable energy generation using bio-waste.
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Published on: Jun 30, 2025, 3:25 PM IST
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