Opinion(c)
2022, BloombergUpdated: May 06, 2022 10:53 am IST
Nothing makes you appreciate
air-conditioning like high summer in India. Here in Delhi, temperatures are
running over 100 degrees for much of the day, with two full months still to go
before the cooling monsoon rains arrive. Unfortunately, just as everyone
decided to crank up their ACs or at least their ceiling fans, electricity
supply collapsed under the strain in large parts of the country.
This is not, sadly, a rare
occurrence. It happens almost every summer and on other occasions when power
demand spikes. There's no clearer evidence that India's electricity sector,
dominated by coal-guzzling power plants and state-run utilities, simply isn't
up to the job. And the problem is only going to get worse: India has rapidly
electrified in recent years and peak power demand has been growing between 8%
and 10% a year.
The reasons for these successive
power crises are almost always the same. Thermal power plants produce
three-fourths of India's electricity. But they can never seem to get their hands
on enough coal.
Sometimes the generation companies
can't pay for coal shipments because they, in turn, have not been paid by
India's improvident electricity distribution companies. Sometimes Coal India
Ltd., the state-run behemoth that produces 80% of India's coal supply, doesn't
produce as much as promised, whether because its miners are on strike or for
other reasons. Sometimes the coal has been dug out of the ground but left at
the pithead because Indian Railways can't organize enough wagons or locomotives.
Sometimes protesters disrupt the long national coal supply chain. Sometimes the
imported coal some plants prefer isn't available or shipments are late.
Whatever the reason, the result is
that India, famously dependent on coal, has coal-fired plants that run at
between 50% and 70% capacity even at times of peak demand. Combined with the
low tariffs set by long-term power purchase agreements, as well as chronically
delayed payments, this means the entire business is unremunerative.
Unsurprisingly, nobody wants to invest in the sector.
Ordinary Indians are paying the
price. Last month, utilities in the industrial state of Gujarat were forced to
buy electricity from the spot market at three or four times the usual price,
even as thermal power plants locally were operating at only 45% capacity.
It has long been conventional wisdom
in India that the country must continue to depend on coal because unlike, say,
crude oil we are sitting on huge reserves. Understandably, we don't want to be
entirely dependent upon imported energy. Energy security means macroeconomic
stability.
Yet the fact is that India's
coal-fired fleet hasn't been designed to take advantage of domestic coal. Back
when many of these plants were planned a decade or more ago, they were expected
to use Indonesian or even Australian coal because those supplies were available
quickly, while India's coal resources were difficult to exploit.
Imported coal is now much more
expensive and supply is no longer reliable. But cheaper domestic coal often
isn't of the quality many plants are designed to handle; in 2017, the federal
minister in charge complained that a third of India's coal-based capacity
depended on imported coal. According to research in 2020 from Stanford
University economist Gireesh Shrimali, about the same proportion of these
plants cost more to run than the levelized cost of solar power in India.
As many analysts have since pointed
out, the situation cries out for more global investment in India to retire
coal, buy out existing contracts, compensate affected communities and switch to
renewables. After all, power crises hit India when temperatures are at their
highest and the sun is shining. (Admittedly, current solar power cells tend to
work less efficiently at high temperatures.)
India cannot keep relying on its
hopelessly inefficient thermal power plant network. The government's own energy
maps make clear how unfit for purpose it is. While efficient modern plants are
located along the coasts and near ports, domestic coal reserves are far inland.
Geography means that getting domestic coal to newer power plants will always be
a problem.
Unlike China, India has significantly
scaled back its plans to expand its coal fleet. There are worries that the
current crisis will cause a minor reversal in these plans and lead to new
plants being commissioned. But that's obviously not going to solve what is a
structural problem.
Indians need to look at our
dependence on coal-fired electricity with an objective eye. Far from being
cheap and reliable, it too often winds up being pricier than it should be and
absent when we need it most. Whatever else coal might provide India, it isn't
energy security.
Disclaimer: These are the personal opinions of the
author.
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