The Standard (Zimbabwe)

India has big clean energy goals - so why is it banking on coal?

- – The Context

BY BHASKER TRIPATHI

AS scientists and activists urge rapid cuts in the use of climate-heating coal for power production around the world, new projection­s from India show that coal will remain its biggest source of electricit­y this decade, despite a fast rise in the nation's renewable energy capacity.

Globally, $1.7 trillion — 60% of total energy investment — is expected to go into clean technologi­es, including renewable energy, in 2023, outpacing fossil fuel nance, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) said on Thursday.

Countries like India need fast deployment of renewables to meet their green power goals. But the IEA said that growth could be held back by low levels of investment in emerging economies due to factors such as higher interest rates, unclear policy frameworks, weak power grids and nancially stressed utilities.

In India, by 2030 coal will still generate the highest share of its electricit­y at 55%, down from 73% today, while renewables, led by solar, will account for 31%, up from 12% now, the country's Central Electricit­y Authority (CEA) said this month.

A agship climate science report from the U.N.'s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in March called for urgent cuts in greenhouse gas emissions this decade to limit the rise in global average temperatur­es to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times.

Those emissions cuts should include an 80% drop in the use of coal - the most climate-polluting fossil fuel - between 2020 and 2030, according to modelling by scientists who worked on the IPCC report.

That would require large emerging economies including China, India and South Africa - which still depend heavily on coal for their electricit­y - to phase down their coal use substantia­lly in the coming years, experts said.

However, those countries have repeatedly said that coal is important for their energy security - and India has resisted e orts by some government­s at U.N. climate negotiatio­ns to secure a commitment to phase out coal power.

Here we examine what India’s continued reliance on coal means for its carbon emissions and global energy politics.

Why does India need more coal along with ambitious renewables targets?

India has one of the world's most ambitious renewable energy targets, to install 500 gigawatts (GW) of capacity by 2030 and meet half of its installed electricit­y capacity from non-fossil fuel sources, including nuclear and hydro.

Installed capacity is the maximum power a plant can produce, while generation measures the amount of electricit­y produced in one hour.

The CEA’s new projection­s show that India will triple its installed renewables capacity, beating its target - a positive sign, experts said, as discussion­s to set a global target for renewables gather pace. The United Arab Emirates, which is hosting this year’s U.N. climate summit, wants countries to commit to triple renewables capacity globally by 2030.

In India, meanwhile, coal power capacity is set to increase by a smaller 19%, shrinking its share to 32% of the total by 2030, down from about half now.

Nonetheles­s, actual electricit­y generation from coal is set to remain the highest source of power by the end of the decade, the CEA numbers show. This is because India's renewables targets, while ambitious, will still not be enough to meet rising power demand, said Rahul Tongia, a senior fellow at the Delhibased Centre for Social and Economic Progress.

India’s per-capita electricit­y consumptio­n will increase rapidly as the 900 million people who gained access to electricit­y in recent years buy more appliances.

Demand will also increase along with growth in electric vehicles, infrastruc­ture and cooling needs amid rising heat fuelled by climate change.

Another concern is that renewables do not o er a reliable source of power generation, as they depend on variable natural resources, from sunlight to wind and water.

To help smooth supply, India needs more than 60 GW of battery storage to fully utilise the potential of its 2030 renewables goal, according to the CEA.

Yet grid-scale battery storage is costly, Tongia noted, with supply chain disruption­s linked to the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war pushing up prices.

India is counting on hydro to balance its grid with the intermitte­nt nature of renewables. Yet while hydropower capacity is growing, it has run up against problems, including being blamed for damage to Himalayan towns and infrastruc­ture from constructi­on of dams and run-of-river projects.

India also has plans to add nuclear power but nuclear has not accelerate­d as fast as other forms of non-fossil-fuel energy, Tongia said, while India has also struggled to secure gas supplies.

“Now what is India left with? Coal remains the backstop,” he added.

What does more coal mean for India’s carbon emissions? India was the world's fourth-largest carbon emitter in 2021, and its emissions are growing at their highest recorded rate, fuelled by coal use for power generation, according to a 2022 report from the Global Carbon Project.

In addition, India is eyeing rapid economic developmen­t in the coming decades, which will require considerab­ly more energy, meaning the sources of that energy will have global repercussi­ons for the climate.

India argues that, historical­ly, it has contribute­d little to global warming and has set a target of reaching net-zero emissions only by 2070, some 20 years after most other countries.

While it is now home to about 17% of the world's population, its cumulative emissions from 1850-2019 are less than 4% of the global total and its per-capita emissions remain low at about one-third of the world average.

But experts expect India's emissions will continue growing this decade and next, peaking sometime after 2040, in the absence of an o cial timeline.

Even with the planned increase in coal power generation by 2030, India's annual coal consumptio­n will likely rise only slightly from its current 10% share of the world average, Tongia noted. Why is global climate action focused on cutting coal use faster than oil and gas?

Global emissions in 2021 were 25% higher from oil and gas than from coal. Some experts are calling for a greater focus on cutting emissions from oil and gas, compared with the emphasis so far on coal.

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