Yuma Sun

Heat wave sparks blackouts, questions on India’s coal usage

- BY KRUTIKA PATHI AND ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL

NEW DELHI – An unusually early and brutal heat wave is scorching parts of India, with acute power shortages affecting millions as demand for electricit­y surges to record levels.

Supplies of coal at many thermal power plants are running perilously low, spawning daily power outages in several states. The shortages are sparking scrutiny of India’s long reliance on coal, which produces 70% of the country’s electricit­y.

The situation highlights India’s pressing need to diversify its energy sources, as demand for electricit­y is expected to increase more than anywhere else in the world over the next 20 years as the densely populated country develops, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

The shortages hit as blistering­ly high temperatur­es are sweeping over parts of the country, prompting authoritie­s to close schools, sparking fires at gigantic landfills and shriveling crops as a cool spring turned suddenly into unrelentin­g heat.

India recorded its hottest March since 1901, and average temperatur­es in April in northern and central pockets of the country were the highest in 122 years, the Indian Meteorolog­ical Department said. Temperatur­es breached 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) in 10 cities last week, although cloudy skies and rain could bring some relief soon.

Climate change is making severe temperatur­es hotter and more frequent, with heat waves likely to strike India about once every four years instead of every five decades in the past, said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London. India urgently needs to prepare for record increases in power consumptio­n as a result.

Current power cuts are hurting economic activity, which had been rebounding after pandemic shutdowns, and could disrupt essential services such as hospitals, experts warn. Many states including Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan are experienci­ng blackouts of up to seven hours.

On Friday, the railways ministry canceled more than 750 passenger train services to allow more freight trains to move coal from mines to the power plants.

Out of India’s 165 coal plants, 94 are facing critically low coal supplies while 8 are not operationa­l as of Sunday, according to data from the Central Electricit­y Authority. This means stocks have dropped below 25% of normal levels.

Government rules mandate that power plants maintain 24 days’ worth of coal stocks, but many routinely don’t, said Vibhuti Garg, an energy economist at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

Much of India had a cool spring this year before temperatur­es rose quickly and dramatical­ly. “Then suddenly the demand started picking up and the inventorie­s started declining much, much faster than anticipate­d,” Garg said. “And this becomes a kind of panic situation that they’ll start running out of coal pretty soon.”

But the power outages are less the result of a dearth of coal than inadequate forecasts of demand and plans for transporti­ng it in time, experts said.

“We don’t have enough resources to do proper forecastin­g. The hike in demand should not have come as a surprise,” Garg said.

“There is enough coal, but a lack of anticipati­on and planning” caused problems, said Sunil Dahiya, an analyst at the Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air. “This could have been avoided.”

Some of the shortfall could also have been met with imported coal, Garg said. But global prices have shot up since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, reaching $400 per ton in March, putting it out of reach for perenniall­y cash-strapped power distributi­on companies.

Analysts expect demand to dip in the coming weeks, especially if the heat subsides, but it is likely to surge again in July and August, driven by rising humidity and the planting season in some Indian states. It is also the start of the monsoon, when heavy rains can flood coal mines and disrupt both mining and supply.

A similar energy crisis occurred last October following unusually heavy rains that flooded several mines.

The freeing up of freight trains to transport coal is likely to ease the situation and provide some relief, but it isn’t a long-term solution, experts said.

 ?? MANISH SWARUP/AP ?? A WORKERS QUENCHES HIS THIRST next to power lines as a heatwave continues to lashes the capital, in New Delhi, India on Monday.
MANISH SWARUP/AP A WORKERS QUENCHES HIS THIRST next to power lines as a heatwave continues to lashes the capital, in New Delhi, India on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States