A 100-key hotel uses 8,000-15,000 litres of hot water per day at 60 °C. Conventional electric or gas heating costs ₹1.2-2.0 lakh/month. Solar water heating (SWH) offsets 60-80% of this load with 18-30 month payback, plus IGBC/GRIHA points, plus tax deduction. For new Indian hotels in any climate zone except deep cold, SWH should be designed in from day one.
This guide covers sizing, panel selection, system architecture, and the regulatory framework.
Hot water demand by hotel class
| Hotel class | L/key/day @ 60 °C |
|---|---|
| 5-star luxury | 200-280 |
| 5-star standard | 150-200 |
| 4-star | 120-160 |
| 3-star | 90-120 |
| Budget | 60-90 |
For 100-key 5-star: 18-28 m³/day demand. At ₹0.80/litre electric heating cost = ₹450-700/day = ₹14-22 lakh/year.
Solar collector types
| Type | Efficiency | Cost (per m² collector area) | Indian climate fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flat plate (FPC) | 50-65% | ₹15-25k | All climates; standard for budget/3-star |
| Evacuated tube (ETC) | 65-80% | ₹25-40k | Cold climates (winter performance superior) |
| Hybrid PV + thermal | 30-40% thermal + electric | ₹35-50k | New builds with PV integration |
For typical Indian hotel: ETC for 4-star+ (deep winter performance critical); FPC for 3-star and budget.
Sizing the system
For 100-key hotel @ 200 L/key/day = 20 m³/day at 60 °C from 25 °C cold-water supply:
Energy required (kWh/day) = m × Cp × ΔT / 3,600
= 20,000 × 4.18 × 35 / 3,600
= 814 kWh/day
Solar yield in Indian climate (typical):
- Northern plains (Delhi): 5.5 kWh/m²/day on 30°-tilt south-facing FPC
- Western coast (Mumbai): 5.0 kWh/m²/day
- Eastern coast (Chennai): 4.8 kWh/m²/day
- Southern (Bangalore): 5.2 kWh/m²/day
- Northeast (Guwahati): 4.3 kWh/m²/day
For 60-70% solar fraction in Mumbai:
- Required collector area = 0.65 × 814 / 5.0 = 106 m²
- For 4 m² ETC modules: 27 modules
- For roof footprint: ~1.4 m² per kW thermal, total 130 m²
Plus storage tank: typical 1.5× daily demand = 30 m³ tank capacity (insulated, multiple stratified compartments).
System architecture options
Option A: Direct system (open loop)
Solar collectors heat hotel water directly. Simplest. Used in non-freezing climates with hard water control.
Option B: Indirect system (closed loop with HX)
Solar fluid (glycol-water) circulates through collectors; heat exchanges via plate HX to hotel water. Required in freezing climates or when water hardness is uncontrolled.
For Indian hotels: Option A in Mumbai/Chennai/Bangalore; Option B in Delhi (winter freezing risk). Cost difference: 10-15% premium for Option B.
Backup heating
Required for: cloudy days + early morning + evening peak demand.
- Boiler-backed (LPG or natural gas): standard for 4-star+
- Heat pump-backed: increasingly common; pairs with chiller condenser
- Electric resistance: only for budget/3-star (highest opex)
BIS + GRIHA + IGBC compliance
BIS Standard 12933
Solar water heaters certified to BIS 12933 (FPC) or BIS 16544 (ETC) get capital subsidy + tax incentives:
- 30% capital subsidy on system cost (residential, varies state)
- Accelerated depreciation 80% (tax benefit for commercial)
- IGBC EE-2 / GRIHA Criterion 15 points
GRIHA v2019 Criterion 15
Awards points based on:
- 1% of building energy from on-site renewable: 1 point
- 5%: 3 points
- 10%: 5 points (max)
For a 100-key hotel with 20 m³/day SWH offsetting electric: typical 8-12% of total building energy = 4-5 GRIHA points.
IGBC v3 EE-2
Awards similar points for on-site renewable. SWH counts.
LEED v4.1 EA Credit (Renewable Energy)
Awards for cumulative annual renewable contribution. SWH less effective than PV per dollar but contributes.
Worked example: 100-key 4-star hotel, Pune
Daily demand: 20 m³ at 60 °C → 814 kWh/day
Collector type: ETC 70% efficiency
Pune yield: 5.4 kWh/m²/day
Solar fraction target: 70%
Required collector area: 0.70 × 814 / 5.4 = 105 m² ETC → 26 modules @ 4 m² each
Storage: 25 m³ insulated tank (1.25× daily demand)
System architecture: Option B (closed-loop indirect, given Pune winter)
Backup: gas boiler (40 kW thermal) + heat pump (15 kW thermal) parallel
Capex: ~₹45-60 lakh (panels + structure + HX + tank + controls)
Annual operating saving: ~₹15-18 lakh (vs all-electric heating)
Payback: 30-36 months
IGBC/GRIHA points: 4-5 + tax benefit
Five common SWH design mistakes
1. No backup heating capacity match design demand. Cloudy week = guests get cold showers.
2. Tank sizing too tight. No buffer for morning peak; ramp-up consumes electricity.
3. Collector orientation wrong. Should be 30-35° tilt south-facing; common mis-mount on east-facing roof loses 30% yield.
4. Long pipe run from collectors to tank. Heat loss in transit; insulate to ECBC standard.
5. No annual cleaning + descaling. Collector efficiency drops 15-25% in 3 years if neglected.
Quick checklist
- [ ] Hot water demand calculated per hotel class + occupancy
- [ ] Collector type per climate (FPC for warm, ETC for cold)
- [ ] Collector area sized for 60-80% solar fraction
- [ ] Storage tank ≥ 1.5× daily demand
- [ ] Backup heating capacity = 100% of design demand
- [ ] System type (direct vs indirect) per climate
- [ ] BIS-certified components (12933 / 16544)
- [ ] Annual maintenance contract (cleaning, descaling, sensor calibration)
- [ ] IGBC v3 / GRIHA renewable points captured
References: BIS 12933 (FPC); BIS 16544 (ETC); GRIHA v2019 Criterion 15; IGBC v3 EE-2; MNRE Solar Water Heater Guidelines; ASHRAE Handbook HVAC Apps 2023 Ch 36 (Solar Energy).
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