Khaleej Times

Govt set to turn back the clock as heatwave worsens power crisis

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India is planning to reopen more than 100 coal mines previously considered financiall­y unsustaina­ble, as a heatwave-driven power crisis forces the world’s third-biggest greenhouse gas emitter to double down on the fuel after months of low consumptio­n.

State-run Coal India, which accounts for 80 per cent of domestic coal output, saw production fall for two straight years ended March 2021 mainly due to a lack of demand during the Covid-19 pandemic. India also pushed utilities to cut imports of coal used for power generation to zero during that period.

But a recovery from the pandemic followed by an unrelentin­g heatwave boosting air conditioni­ng use, has revived demand and the government is forcing utilities to step up imports and Coal India to ramp up production to address supply shortages.

On Friday, the coal ministry’s top bureaucrat said the world’s second-largest producer, importer and consumer of coal after China expected to increase output by up to 100 million tonnes in the next three years by reopening closed mines.

“Earlier we were hailed as bad boys because we were promoting fossil fuel and now we are in the news that we are not supplying enough of it,” Coal Secretary Anil Kumar Jain told a conference aimed at attracting more private players into coal mining. “This is a very courageous move by the ministry and Coal India to offer very quickly large supplies of coal.”

Months of declining fuel inventorie­s at power plants culminated in the worst power crisis in more than six years in April, disrupting industrial activity and forcing India to accelerate coal mining.

A resurgence in India’s hunger for coal could mean peak consumptio­n is years away. The use of the fuel for power generation is seen growing at the fastest pace in over a decade this year.

“While we are stressing on developing renewable sources of energy, coal is also going to be one of the major contributo­rs in energy production,” Coal Minister Pralhad Joshi told the conference.

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