India's domestic coal-based power plants use more imported coal than imported coal-based plants
17 Aug 2023
The reverse trend, where domestic coal based
power plants are using more imported coal than ICB plants, is due to a
government policy aimed at ensuring continuous electricity generation to meet
the rising demand.
Since last year, the government has
been invoking section 11 of the Electricity Act, 2003, under which imported
coal based power plants have to mandatorily operate to meet the country’s
increasing power demand.
Domestic coal-based
thermal power plants have pipped imported coal-based plants in consumption of
imported coal due to higher blending for power generation.
Domestic coal-based power
plants consumed 35.1 million metric tons (MMT) of imported coal in 2022-23,
accounting for 63.1 percent of the total coal imports (55.6 MMT) for the
sector, according to data from the Ministry of Power. This is a steep increase from
2018-19, when these plants, which otherwise run on coal produced within India,
consumed 34.6 percent (21.4 MMT) of the 61.7 MMT coal imported for the power
sector during the year.
In the five years between
FY19 and FY23, India has added about 10 GW of domestic coal based power
capacity. The higher consumption of imported coal by these power plants is
primarily because the imported coal was used to blend with domestic coal to
ensure higher power generation at a time when local coal output has remained lackluster.
Meanwhile, imported coal
based (ICB) power plants, which only use the grades of coal that are imported,
consumed 20.5 MMT or 36.8 percent of the imported coal in 2022-23. In 2018-19,
the same was as high as 65.3 percent (40.3 MMT) of the total coal imported for
the power sector.