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Eye on Asia | Why India’s private sector is key to Modi’s green energy pledge

  • India needs to support its energy champions to hasten its shift from fossil fuel dependence to a green economy
  • Reliance Industries, Adani Enterprises and the Tata Group are showing the way by expanding their renewable energy interests

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Workers prepare to load coal onto a truck at the Jharia coalfield in Dhanbad, in India’s Jharkhand state, on October 14. India has one of the world’s largest reserves of coal and is the second-largest importer of the fossil fuel, yet it is in crisis. Photo: AFP
In the recently concluded UN climate change summit, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi committed to achieving net-zero emissions by 2070 even as his nation was reeling from a power crisis induced by coal shortages.
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India recorded a power supply shortage of 1.2 billion units in October – the highest in more than five years – amid a crunch in coal stocks for thermal plants. The western state of Gujarat alone recorded a power shortage of 215 million units, the highest for any month in more than a decade.

Given that coal provides around half of India’s energy, the coal shortage will have a wide-ranging impact on the economy, leading to inflation and slower economic recovery.

The easing of pandemic restrictions and opening of the economy led to a sudden spurt in demand for power. That demand could not be met with ready supplies, leading to a mismatch between demand and supply for coal.

India has one of the world’s largest reserves of coal and is the second-largest importer of the fossil fuel, yet it is in crisis. While the shortage could in part be attributed to the Covid-19 pandemic, India’s measures to limit production of domestic coal to meet its climate targets are one of the major reasons for the demand-supply mismatch.

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India’s coal dependence is why Modi’s net zero emissions by 2070 pledge surprised many at COP26

India’s coal dependence is why Modi’s net zero emissions by 2070 pledge surprised many at COP26

The power crisis is not isolated to coal-powered plants. Crude oil provides around a quarter of India’s power, and more than 80 per cent of its oil demand is met through imports.

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