"There is a very hectic pace of financing in the renewable projects," said James Cameron, the Singapore-based managing director at the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corp (HSBC).
Noting the government's ambitious target of completing 100-GW of solar and 75-GW of wind energy by 2022, he said: "Certainly, India is going to have more megawatt of renewable energy on the ground than anywhere else in Asia."
"Domestic banks are supporting these well-structured projects very strongly by offering competitive terms and pricing. And that is why we are looking at a lot of projects that are to be done," said the HSBC's co-head of infrastructure and real estate group for Asia Pacific.
International financiers are also more comfortable with renewable projects by state-owned corporations and state governments with higher grade credit ratings, said Cameron who addressed the "Financing Energy Projects in Asia 2016" here earlier this week.
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But he also noted potential capital capacity freeze in the domestic markets, given the huge pressure on funding 175,000-MW projects.
According to industry estimate, each renewable megawatt would cost USD 1 million.
The bidding process is more streamlined, he pointed out in reference to easier regulatory regimes and tariff offerings compared to India's past regulation-bounded project implementations.