Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Badarpur plant to shut down next year

- Ritam Halder ritam.halder@hindustant­imes.com

POLLUTION CONTROL Coalbased power plant is major contributo­r to pollution load in Delhi; Tughlaqaba­d substation to open by June 2018

Come August 1, 2018, and the highly polluting Badarpur power plant will stop spewing polluting smoke.

The Supreme Court-appointed Environmen­t Pollution Prevention and Control Authority (EPCA) on Friday, in a meeting with Delhi power department and National Thermal Power Corporatio­n (NTPC) officials, decided that the 705 MW thermal power plant will stop operations by July 31, 2018.

A power department official also informed EPCA that the Tughlaqaba­d sub station, which is commission­ed to meet the power demand of south Delhi, will be completed by June 2018.

According to a report by IIT Kanpur, coal-based power plants operating in Delhi, which as of now is only the Badarpur one, are major contributo­rs to pollution load in Delhi. Coal-based plants alone have contribute­d 11% of the capital’s PM2.5 load.

During summer months, coal and fly ash contribute 26% of the PM2.5. In winter, secondary particles, including vehicular emissions and power plants, contribute 30% of the PM2.5.

The coal-fired power plant was shut down in November last year after air pollution levels in Delhi went up to alarming levels.

The NTPC officials informed the EPCA meeting on Friday that it has prepared a remediatio­n plan on managing the flyash, of around 250 lakh tonne, present at the site. The plan, been submitted to the Delhi Pollution Control Committee, includes planting flowering plants to stop fly ash from getting airborne as done at Dadri thermal power plant.

EPCA chairman Bhure Lal asked officials to ensure that the Bawana gas-based power plant should operate in its full capacity. “We want Bawana to run on full capacity on gas. You tell us how it can be done,” Bhure Lal told officials at the meeting.

The Delhi power department officials told EPCA that the thermal plant, essentiall­y two of its units of 210MW each, have to function to meet the power needs of south Delhi areas and the peak demand during the summers, which may cross the 6,500MW mark this year.

The city of about 20 million people has been struggling to clean up its air that contains a toxic cocktail of dust, gas from vehicle and factory exhausts.

The EPCA has already submitted to the SC a new comprehens­ive plan to bring down air pollution in Delhi. This will aim to bring down the annual average of PM2.5 down by 70%. The plan will take more stringent actions against combustion sources like vehicles, industry, power plant and waste burning.

 ?? HT FILE PHOTO ??
HT FILE PHOTO
 ??  ?? Badarpur Thermal Power Station near Faridabad.
Badarpur Thermal Power Station near Faridabad.

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