Business Standard

How India can make its economic recovery green

The renewable sector holds the key to not only offsetting the job losses due to the pandemic, but also making the recovery sustainabl­e

- BHASKER TRIPATHI

The renewable sector holds the key to not only offsetting the job losses due to the pandemic, but also making the recovery sustainabl­e, writes

In reviving its economy post-covid-19, India could turn a crisis into an opportunit­y by resetting its energy spending to favour clean energy, enabling citizens to continue enjoying the unpreceden­ted clean air and blue skies bestowed by the lockdown.

As a start, Prime Minister Narendra Modi could solarise over 39,000 unelectrif­ied health sub-centres—the first point of contact between the primary health care system and the local community — serving 230 million people in rural India. That is the recommenda­tion of 20 leaders from top think-tanks, renewable energy companies, industry groups, and health care services, who wrote to Prime Minister Modi on April 30, while there is still time to tilt policy.

Another way of shifting from fossil fuels to clean energy, say experts, is for the government to transfer some of the massive subsidies currently given to fossil fuels to renewable energy.

Other recommenda­tions on how to follow a green pathway to economic recovery are not only pouring in from India’s thinktanks (such as here and here) but some of the world’s biggest economic institutio­ns (read here, here and here).

“With this restart, a window of hope and opportunit­y opens… an opportunit­y for nations to green their recovery packages and shape the 21st century economy in ways that are clean, green, healthy, safe and more resilient,” United Nations climate body chief Patricia Espinosa said on April 22.

A new report that analysed India’s subsidy support to its energy sector, by think-tanks Internatio­nal Institute for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t (IISD) and Council on Energy, Environmen­t and Water (CEEW), made similar recommenda­tions.

“There is a phenomenal opportunit­y for India in re-thinking if there is a better way of spending these [coal and oil and gas] subsidies to make them investment­worthy,” said Karthik Ganesan, a research fellow at CEEW and one of the authors of the report.

It is true that government subsidies for renewable power generation have grown threefold over the five years to 2018-19, from ~3,224 crore in 2014 to ~9,930 crore in 2019, largely driven by India’s climate promise of deploying 175 gigawatt (GW) by 2022, as per the report.

However, these are only a fraction of the subsidies given to carbon-emitting fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas: India spent about ~83,134 crore in 2018-19 on subsidies to coal and oil and gas. That is seven times more than the subsidies for renewables, said the April 16, joint report by IISD-CEEW.

Currently, 56 per cent of India’s electricit­y comes from coal, 36 per cent comes from oil and gas and about 3 per cent comes from renewables. India has made good progress in greening its power generation: Renewables now account for nearly one-fifth of India’s total installed power capacity, up from 13 per cent in 2014.

The country’s energy demands have fallen by up to 30 per cent during the first week of lockdown that began on March 25. Now, as economic activity revives, demand for coal and oil will increase, but the rate of growth will be low and this presents an opportunit­y, said Vibhuti Garg, senior energy specialist at IISD and a coauthor of the IISD-CEEW report. Any increase in demand can be met through more offtake of cheaper, renewable energy, she added.

Decisions taken now will determine climate change for a long time to come. “Money pumped into energy infrastruc­ture across the world in the coming years will shape emissions trajectori­es for decades,” Aditya Valiathan Pillai, senior researcher, Centre for Policy Research, wrote in a newsletter on April 11.

Here’s what experts think India should do to chart a fresh course in energy.

Fossil fuels more volatile

For coal-based power, the last decade has been marked as a period of stressed and stranded assets. In the pre- Covid-19 economy, despite the subsidy support and high demand, investors have seen their holdings in key Indian coal mining and coal-based power companies underperfo­rm the Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensex by an average of 10 per cent a year since 2013, costing ~25,000 crore ($3.5 billion) in forgone returns, according to a December 2018 study by the non-government­al environmen­tal organisati­on Greenpeace.

Why invest in coal when investing in renewables will yield multiple benefits? “Building new coal and propping up the existing fleet with stimulus money would be throwing good money after bad,” Matt Gray, co-head of power and utilities at the think-tank Carbon Tracker, said at the launch of an April 8, report that he coauthored. The report evaluates the economic viability of countries investing in coal to recover from the pandemic and warns India against it.

In India (a regulated market), 2 per cent of the existing 222 GW coal fleet is running at an underlying loss; a further 66 GW is in the pipeline but 23 per cent of this will enter the market with negative cash flow, said the Carbon Tracker report. “Already 51 per cent of operating coal power costs more to run than building new renewables,” it said.

Distribute­d solar power

In cities and industrial clusters, rooftop solar can avoid air pollution. In remote rural hospitals where electricit­y supply is erratic, solar power could be used to run ventilator­s and other medical equipment at a lower cost, Ulka Kelkar, director, climate programme, World Resources Institute India, told Indiaspend.

Since it is the capital costs that deter adoption of solar power, the government’s recovery package for micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES) could infuse capital to enable low-cost energy efficiency upgrades restricted by lack of funds and informatio­n. “Such investment­s will pay for themselves and save costs for MSMES,” Kelkar said.

The government or corporate social responsibi­lity funds could cover the upfront costs of solar power for rural hospitals, or to support solar vendors to set up such systems in rural areas and sell the power to local hospitals, homes and shops, Kelkar said.

Distribute­d renewable energy (DRE) sources including solar pumps and rooftop solar provide huge opportunit­ies for growth. India has announced massive schemes including KUSUM (to promote solar pumps) and the rooftop solar programme. Ganesan of CEEW said if India could channel some of the savings that would accrue from negative oil prices and additional taxes on diesel and petrol into these sources, India’s economic recovery would be on a better footing environmen­tally.

Prepare the grid

To be able to absorb variable and intermitte­nt injections of renewable energy supply, electricit­y grids would have to be modernised across Indian states.

While further investment in new renewables capacity is important, it could take a few years for the projects to show economic impact. The intervenin­g period could be used to prepare India’s grid, said Garg of IISD. “Any new investment should be in strengthen­ing and modernisat­ion of the grid. A modern grid can enable better absorption of variable renewable energy and for the adoption of sustainabl­e transport,” she said.

In tandem, to prepare workers for jobs in the renewable sector, free training programmes such as the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy’s Suryamitra programme, which skills youths for solar energy, need to be expanded.

If carried out as part of an integrated new policy, these changes could help steer India on a new path that combines economic recovery with better public health, thanks to less air pollution, and the kind of clean air that locked-down citizens have experience­d for the first time in decades.

Job losses caused by the lockdown could be offset by aggressive­ly supporting the renewable energy sector, as it is faster to build and start a renewable energy plant than fossil fuel-based plants, Sunil Dahiya, analyst, Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), a think-tank, told Indiaspend. For instance, the 648-MW Kamuthi solar plant in Tamil Nadu was completed in eight months. “Therefore, any relief package directed at the power sector has to keep this in mind and divert the majority of funds towards renewable energy.”

Lasting gains

Global coal use in electricit­y generation must fall 80 per cent below the 2010 levels by 2030 to limit global warming to 1.5°C, according to an analysis of recent research from the UN’S Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change.

After the global financial crisis of 2008, global CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion and cement production grew 5.9 per cent in 2010, more than offsetting the 1.4 per cent decrease in 2009, said Helen Mountford, vice president, Climate & Economics, World Resources Institute.

To avoid dissipatin­g the clean air gains due to the economic slowdown caused by Covid-19 as countries lift restrictio­ns, some of the world’s biggest economic institutio­ns have issued calls to invest in lowcarbon and “green” pathways . Investing in renewables is not only a necessary but a smart economic choice, experts believe.

“A mounting body of evidence demonstrat­es that pursuing low-carbon and climate-resilient growth is the best way to unlock lasting economic and social benefits,” Mountford said.

Bold climate action could deliver at least $26 trillion in net global economic benefits between now and 2030 compared with a business-as-usual approach, according to a 2018 report by the New Climate Economy, an independen­t body commission­ed by the government­s of seven nations.

“This includes creating more than 65 million new low-carbon jobs in 2030, equivalent to the combined workforces of the United Kingdom and Egypt today,” Mountford wrote, mentioning the report by the New Climate Economy.

Decarbonis­ation of the global energy system can grow the global economy and create up to 28 million jobs by 2050, according to the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency. The opportunit­y to rethink its approach towards fossil fuel provides India with a co-benefit: Reducing the social cost of fossil fuel usage through cleaner air. More than a million yearly deaths in India can be attributed to air pollution.

Air pollution levels in Indian cities— infamous for the worst level of pollution, specifical­ly of dangerous particulat­es and nitrogen dioxide ( No2)—drasticall­y reduced due to a fall in fossil fuel consumptio­n in the industrial, power and transport sector, said an April 16, analysis by CREA.

Bold climate action could deliver at least $26 trillion in net global economic benefits between now and 2030 compared with a business-as-usual approach, according to a report by the New Climate Economy

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? To avoid dissipatin­g the clean air gains due to the economic slowdown, calls to invest in low-carbon and “green” pathways are growing
To avoid dissipatin­g the clean air gains due to the economic slowdown, calls to invest in low-carbon and “green” pathways are growing

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India