Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - HT Navi Mumbai Live

Heatwaves, coal shortage spark fear of power crisis

- Chetan Chauhan letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Heat waves across several parts of India, the consequent increase in power demand, and fears of a coal shortage have triggered planned blackouts in at least seven states in the country, and experts worry that at least some parts of India could face a serious power crisis this summer.

According to officials across the seven states, a surge in demand for electricit­y because of a series of heatwaves since mid-March has prompted Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Goa and Karnataka to reduce power supply for industry and reschedule supply for the farming sector. The first half of April has seen domestic power demand hit a 38-year high, according to the Union power ministry.

According to data from the power ministry, normative coal stocks, the quantum required to keep plants running at full capacity for 26 days, were low across India, except in coal-rich states such as Odisha, Jharkhand and Chhattisga­rh. In West Bengal, coal stock was 1- 5% of the normative level, in Rajasthan it was 1-25%, in Uttar Pradesh 14-21%, and in Madhya Pradesh 6-13%. Overall, at the national level, it was 36%, a dip of two percentage points since last week. In midMarch, it was about 50%.

Although the portal shows the shortfall of only 3,002 megawatts (MW) as against the total peak requiremen­t of 1,88,576 MW across the country, state government officials said requests for additional supply of power are not been addressed by the Power Grid Corporatio­n of India. Officials in Madhya Pradesh, which is facing shortfall of 1,000 MW, and Punjab said their requests for additional supply of power from the central grid have not been accepted.

Madhya Pradesh power minister Pradhyuman Singh Tomar met Union railway minister Ashwini Vaishnav on April 11 and requested for additional racks of coal. The Haryana government would soon import coal for the first time in almost a decade to meet its energy needs and to ensure fuel supply to state-run thermal power plants, officials said, adding a global tender has already been floated for purchasing imported coal.

Last week, Union power minister RK Singh held a meeting with officials of Gujarat and a few other states in Ahmedabad, and decided that imported coal based independen­t power producers (IPP) should operate their power plants at full capacity to reduce pressure on domestic coal demand. Some of these power plants are shut due to high cost of imported coal.

The Centre has also told power producers to increase blending of imported coal from 4% to 10% to overcome the shortage. “At the meeting, it was observed that coal stocks at the power plant end were only 36% of the normative requiremen­t which would be sufficient for only about 11 days,” said a Gujarat government official aware of the matter.

India’s total installed power generation capacity is around 395,075 MW and of this, around 70% is from thermal power plants. During summer, officials said the pressure on thermal power plants increases as power load factor (PLF) of hydropower plants goes down due to reduction in water supply from hills. This year, the hydropower plants are running at 30-40% of PLF, the power ministry’s website showed.

In some places, state government officials said, power cuts are as long as eight hours.

At least three chief ministers have written to the Centre over coal shortage leading to power cuts.

However, no power cuts have been reported from the NorthEast states, which are witnessing pre-monsoon showers, and from Chhattisga­rh and Jharkhand.

Demand for power, and coal, increased as temperatur­es rose to 42.6 degrees Celsius on April 20, the hottest (for the day) in five years, according to the India Meteorolog­ical Department. The national average maximum temperatur­e reached almost 33.2 degree Celsius in March, the highest on record since authoritie­s started collecting the data in 1901.

The state cabinet has already given its nod to import coal. Sonia Gandhi has written to us offering support to tide over the crisis. AJIT PAWAR, deputy chief minister

(With inputs from state bureaus

and Bloomberg)

 ?? PTI ?? According to the Union power ministry, first half of April has recorded a 38-year high in the domestic power demand.
PTI According to the Union power ministry, first half of April has recorded a 38-year high in the domestic power demand.

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