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Regulatory Risk: Lessons from Solar Duty Policy Reversals

Solar panels installed on a commercial rooftop under bright sunlight
Representational image. Credit: Canva
The court emphasized that while the state can modify exemptions, it must consider the promises made to investors. Each case regarding the seven-year exemption must be reviewed individually.

Policy Volatility is the Silent Killer of Solar ROI

While this ruling originates in Rajasthan, the underlying lesson is universal for European solar installers and developers: regulatory certainty is not a given. When governments retroactively withdraw tax exemptions or subsidies, the entire financial model of a project—whether it's a C&I rooftop installation or a utility-scale farm—can collapse overnight.

Why This Matters for European Installers

European markets are currently navigating a transition from high-subsidy environments to merchant-led models. Installers often sell projects based on long-term government guarantees. This case serves as a stark reminder that 'grandfathering' clauses are only as strong as the legal framework supporting them. If your business model relies on a multi-year tax benefit or feed-in tariff, you must account for 'regulatory risk' in your client’s risk assessment.

  • Contractual Resilience: Always include clauses that address legislative change. If a government pulls the rug, who carries the financial liability?
  • Diversification: Don't build business models solely on the back of a single policy incentive. Focus on self-consumption and energy management systems (EMS) that provide value beyond just grid-export subsidies.
  • Due Diligence: When dealing with large-scale clients, perform a 'policy stress test.' What happens to the payback period if the tax exemption is repealed in year three?

Ultimately, this ruling reinforces the principle of 'legitimate expectation.' Investors are increasingly willing to challenge states in court when policies are revoked without warning. For the solar industry, the takeaway is clear: build for the market, not just for the subsidy. Relying on policy stability is a vulnerability; technical and operational efficiency is your only true hedge against government whim.

Why it matters: Mitigate your business risk by stress-testing project ROI against potential shifts in government tax policy and subsidy frameworks.
📰 Read original article at SolarQuarter →