Via
BRF,
this outline of India's planned power sector growth:
The government has not announced how much power is required to ensure 24
x 7 supply to all Indian households by 2019. But in its reports it
talks of an addition of more than 200,000 Mw of power capacity in eight
years by 2022. This is more than three-fourths of the power capacity
added by the country over six decades.
To put this 200,000-Mw target in perspective: In the 11th Five-Year
Plan, India added only about one-fourth of it. The addition in 2007-12
was 54,964 Mw, against a target of 78,700 Mw.
The 12th Five-Year Plan (2012-17), prepared under the United Progressive
Alliance (UPA) government, had planned to add 118,536 Mw. Of this,
51,795 Mw was added in the first two years of the Plan, while the
remaining 66,740 Mw was to be added by 2017 . But the current government
hopes to double this and add 115,603 Mw by 2017. From 2017 to 2022, the
government aims to add 101,745 Mw.
This means the power added in three years from 2014-17 will be more than what will be added in the five years after.
Even this unprecedented target may not be sufficient to meet the
requirements for a 24x7 target, as the government report acknowledges,
noting, "these assessments have been for the purpose of transmission
planning, and not for assessing generation capacity required for meeting
the demands."
Most of the added power generation will be coal.
India's
dependence on coal could have been reduced if there was clarity on how
gas production would ramp up. But the state Plans reflect uncertainty on
this front. The Andhra Pradesh Plan notes that 2.5 mscmd of gas is
being supplied against a requirement of 13 mscmd, just enough for 500
Mw, leaving 2,270 Mw of capacity stranded. It does not clarify how much
gas supply it will get in the future. The power ministry calculated that
14,305 Mw of gas-based plants were left stranded in the April
2014-January 2015 period . The government has formulated a new scheme
for import of gas to ease the mess in the sector.
The other potential source of energy, large hydropower, locked up in
issues of litigation, displacement and environment, has grown at a much
lower rate than expected . Only 5,544 Mw of hydro power was installed
during the 11th Five-Year Plan, against a target of 15,627 Mw. The
government is pushing states in the Northeast to cancel memoranda of
association with private players and hand over hydropower projects to
the public sector.
Even as the NDA government disentangles the hydropower sector out of the
mess, it has given a thrust to the emerging renewable energy sectors,
setting a 100-Gw target for solar power and a 60-Gw one for wind power.
The rate of growth it desires is unprecedented. But the government is
not inclined to formally announce these numbers as official targets
under the UN climate change agreement, to be signed in December 2015 -
an indication that these may be more aspirational than real.