“Such market swings are no longer isolated events; they are becoming a regular feature on India’s power exchanges,” said Das.
“Going forward, price volatility is likely to keep increasing as India’s power generation and consumption patterns change. Rising solar penetration will keep daytime prices low, while the rigidity of thermal plants means that they will operate at very low levels more often during the day and take time to power up and cater to the high evening demand,” he added.
The report models different scenarios for how power prices are likely to move on the exchanges, forecasting that by participating in DAM alone, merchant BESS investments can offer an internal rate of return of up to 17% from an investment made in 2025.
“There are multiple use cases for batteries: participation in the merchant market is one that’s been somewhat under-appreciated till now,” says Satyadeep Jain, Director – Equity Research at Ambit Private Limited.
Participating in the ancillary (grid-balancing) services market will increase revenue and improve returns. “While arbitrage in the DAM contributes nearly 80-85% of total earnings, ancillary services can account for the remaining 15-20%. Under optimistic assumptions, annual revenues by participating in both DAM and ancillary (grid-balancing) services market can reach INR 3.3 million/MWh, pushing project internal rates of returns (IRRs) to roughly 24%,” said the report’s co-author Neshwin Rodrigues, Senior Energy Analyst at Ember.
“Even under conservative estimations of the price volatility, returns remain strong at 21%, but with a larger share of earnings coming from ancillary market participation,” he added.
The report concludes that as India’s electricity system evolves to integrate more variable renewable energy, the case for investing in battery storage becomes stronger.
“Energy transition, and the ensuing higher share of variable renewables in the energy mix, is driving extreme intra-day price swings and shortage of ancillary services at the grid. This is both a risk and an opportunity, and battery storage appears well placed to capitalise on this,” Jain said.