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Electricity sector in India

India is the third largest producer of electricity in the world.[6] During the fiscal year (FY) 2019–20, the total electricity generation in the country was 1,598 TWh, of which 1,383.5 TWh generated by utilities.[7][8] The gross electricity consumption per capita in FY2019 was 1,208 kWh.[7]

Electricity sector of India
Transmission towers at a Chennai lake
Data
Electricity coverage99.94% (31 March 2019)[1]
Installed capacity409,161 MW[2]
Production (FY2020)1,383 TWh[3]
GHG emissions from electricity generation (2018)2,309.98 Mt of CO2[4]
Average electricity use (FY2020)1,208 kWh per capita[3]
Transmission & Distribution losses (FY2019)20.66%[3]
Consumption by sector
(% of total)
Residential24.01%[3] (FY2020)
Industrial42.69%[3] (FY2020)
Agriculture17.67%[3] (FY2020)
Commercial8.04%[3] (FY2020)
Traction1.52%[3] (FY2020)
Tariffs and financing
Average residential tariff
(US$/kW·h, Dec. 2020)
5.75 (7.2¢ US)[5]
Average commercial tariff
(US$/kW·h, Dec. 2020)
8.64 (11¢ US)[5]
Services
Share of private sector in generation33.46% (FY2020)[3]
Institutions
Responsibility for policy-settingMinistry of Power
Responsibility for renewable energyMinistry of New and Renewable Energy
Responsibility for the environmentMinistry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change
Electricity sector lawElectricity Act, 2003

In FY2015, electric energy consumption in agriculture was recorded as being the highest (17.89%) worldwide.[3] The per capita electricity consumption is low compared to most other countries despite India having a low electricity tariff.[9]

The national electric grid in India has an installed capacity of 409.1 GW as of 30 November 2022.[2]Renewable power plants, which also include large hydroelectric power plants, constitute 40.7% of the total installed capacity. India has a surplus power generation capacity but lacks adequate fuel supply and power distribution infrastructure. The average capacity factor of thermal power plants is below 60% against the norm of 85%.[10]

India's electricity sector is dominated by fossil fuels, in particular coal, which produced about three-quarters of the country's electricity.[11][12] The government is making efforts to increase investment in renewable energy. The government's draft National Electricity Plan of 2022 states that the country does not need anymore fossil fuel power plants in the utility sector until 2027 besides those currently under construction.[13][14] It is expected that non-fossil fuel generation contribution is likely to be around 44.7% of the total gross electricity generation by 2029–30.[15]

History

 
India electricity production by source

The first demonstration of electric light in Calcutta (now Kolkata) was conducted on 24 July 1879 by P.W. Fleury & Co. On 7 January 1897, Kilburn & Co secured the Calcutta electric lighting license as agents of the Indian Electric Co, which was registered in London on 15 January 1897. A month later, the company was renamed the Calcutta Electric Supply Corporation. The control of the company was transferred from London to Calcutta only in 1970. The introduction of electricity in Calcutta was a success, and power was next introduced in Bombay (now Mumbai).[16] The first electric lighting demonstration in Mumbai was in 1882 at Crawford Market and the Bombay Electric Supply & Tramways Company (BEST) set up a generating station in 1905 to provide electricity for the tramway.[17]

The first hydroelectric installation in India was installed near a tea estate at Sidrapong for the Darjeeling Municipality in 1897.[18] The first electric street light in Asia was lit on 5 August 1905 in Bangalore.[19] The first electric train in the country ran on the Harbour Line between Bombay's Victoria Terminus and Kurla on 3 February 1925.[20] The first high-voltage laboratory of India was established at the Government Engineering College, Jabalpur in 1947.[21] On 18 August 2015, Cochin International Airport became the world's first fully solar powered airport with the inauguration of a dedicated solar plant.[22][23]

India began using grid management on a regional basis in the 1960s. Individual State grids were interconnected to form 5 regional grids covering mainland India, the Northern, Eastern, Western, North Eastern and Southern Grids. These regional links were established to enable transmission of surplus electricity between states in each region. In the 1990s, the Indian government began planning for a national grid. Regional grids were initially interconnected by asynchronous high-voltage direct current (HVDC) back-to-back links facilitating the limited exchange of regulated power. The links were subsequently upgraded to high capacity synchronous links.[24]

The first interconnection of regional grids was established in October 1991 when the North Eastern and Eastern grids were interconnected. The Western Grid was interconnected with these grids in March 2003. The Northern grid was also interconnected in August 2006, forming a Central Grid that was synchronously connected and operating at one frequency.[24] The sole remaining regional grid, the Southern Grid, was synchronously interconnected to the Central Grid on 31 December 2013 with the commissioning of the 765 kV Raichur-Solapur transmission line, establishing the National Grid.[24][25]

By the end of the calendar year 2015, despite poor hydroelectricity generation, India had become a power surplus nation with huge power generation capacity idling for want of demand.[26][27][28] The calendar year 2016 started with steep falls in the international price of energy commodities such as coal, diesel oil, naphtha, bunker fuel, and liquefied natural gas (LNG), which are used in electricity generation in India.[29][30][31][32][33] As a result of the global glut in petroleum products, these fuels became cheap enough to compete with pit head coal-based power generators.[34] Coal prices have also fallen.[35] Low demand for coal has led to coal stocks building up at power stations as well as coal mines.[36] New installations of renewable energy in India surpassed installations of fossil fuel for the first time in 2016–17.[37]

On 29 March 2017, the Central Electricity Authority (CEA) stated that for the first time India has become a net exporter of electricity. India exported 5,798 GWh to neighboring countries, against a total import of 5,585 GWh.

The Government of India launched a program called "Power for All" in 2016.[38] The program was accomplished by December 2018 in providing the necessary infrastructure to ensure uninterrupted electricity supply to all households, industries, and commercial establishments.[39] Funding was made through a collaboration between the Government of India and its constituent states.[40][41]

Installed capacity

Installed capacity by source in utility sector as on 13 January 2023[42]
Coal in IndiaLignite: 6,620 MW (1.6%)Gas: 24,824 MW (6.0%)Diesel: 589 MW (0.1%)Hydroelectric power in IndiaWind, Solar & Other RE: 120,900 MW (29.5%)Nuclear power in India 
  •   Coal: 203,775 MW (49.7%)
  •   Lignite: 6,620 MW (1.6%)
  •   Gas: 24,824 MW (6.0%)
  •   Diesel: 589 MW (0.1%)
  •   Hydro: 46,850 MW (11.4%)
  •   Wind, Solar & Other RE: 120,900 MW (29.5%)
  •   Nuclear: 6,780 MW (1.7%)

The total installed power generation capacity is the sum of utility capacity, captive power capacity, and other non-utilities.

Utility power

Growth of Installed Capacity in India[3]
Installed Capacity
as on
Thermal (MW) Nuclear
(MW)
Renewable (MW) Total (MW) % Growth
(on yearly basis)
Coal Gas Diesel Sub-Total
Thermal
Hydro Other
Renewable
Sub-Total
Renewable
31 December 1947 756 - 98 854 - 508 - 508 1,362 -
31 December 1950 1,004 - 149 1,153 - 560 - 560 1,713 8.59%
31 March 1956 1,597 - 228 1,825 - 1,061 - 1,061 2,886 13.04%
31 March 1961 2,436 - 300 2,736 - 1,917 - 1,917 4,653 12.25%
31 March 1966 4,417 137 352 4,903 - 4,124 - 4,124 9,027 18.80%
31 March 1974 8,652 165 241 9,058 640 6,966 - 6,966 16,664 10.58%
31 March 1979 14,875 168 164 15,207 640 10,833 - 10,833 26,680 12.02%
31 March 1985 26,311 542 177 27,030 1,095 14,460 - 14,460 42,585 9.94%
31 March 1990 41,236 2,343 165 43,764 1,565 18,307 - 18,307 63,636 9.89%
31 March 1997 54,154 6,562 294 61,010 2,225 21,658 902 22,560 85,795 4.94%
31 March 2002 62,131 11,163 1,135 74,429 2,720 26,269 1,628 27,897 105,046 4.49%
31 March 2007 71,121 13,692 1,202 86,015 3,900 34,654 7,760 42,414 132,329 5.19%
31 March 2012 112,022 18,381 1,200 131,603 4,780 38,990 24,503 63,493 199,877 9.00%
31 March 2014 145,273 21,782 1,200 168,255 4,780 40,532 31,692 72,224 245,259 10.77%
31 March 2017 192,163 25,329 838 218,330 6,780 44,478 57,260 101,138 326,841 10.31%
31 March 2018 197,171 24,897 838 222,906 6,780 45,293 69,022 114,315 344,002 5.25%
31 March 2019 200,704 24,937 637 226,279 6,780 45,399 77,641 123,040 356,100 3.52%
31 March 2020[43] 205,135 24,955 510 230,600 6,780 45,699 87,028 132,427 370,106 3.93%
31 March 2021[44] 209,294 24,924 510 234,728 6,780 46,209 94,433 140,642 382,151 3.25%
31 March 2022[2] 210,700 24,899 510 236,109 6,780 46,723 109,885 156,607 399,497 4.53%

Nearly 32,285 MW coal and gas based thermal power projects are under construction as on 1 April 2021.[45]

The total installed utility power generation capacity as on 30 September 2022 by type is given below.[2]

Breakdown of Installed Generation Capacity as on 30/09/2022
Source Installed Capacity (MW) % of Share in Total
Fossil Fuels (Total) 236,086 57.9%
Coal 204,079 50%
Lignite 6,620 1.6%
Gas 24,824 6.1%
Diesel 562 0.1%
Non-Fossil Fuels (Total) 171,710 42.1%
Hydro 46,850 11.5%
Wind 41,666 10.2%
Solar 60,814 14.9%
Bio Mass Power/Cogen 10,206 2.5%
Waste to Energy 495 0.1%
Small Hydro 4,899 1.2%
Nuclear 6,780 1.7%
Total Installed Capacity 407,797 100%

Hydroelectric power plants with ≤ 25 MW generation capacity are included in Renewable category (classified as SHP – Small Hydro Project)

Captive power

The installed captive power generation capacity (above 1 MW capacity) associated with industry-owned plants is 70,000 MW as of 31 March 2021.[46] In fiscal year 2020–21, captive power generation was 200,000 GWh.[46][47] Diesel power generation sets of 75,000 MW capacity (excluding sets of size above 1 MW and below 100 kVA) are also installed in the country.[48][49] In addition, there are a large number of diesel generators of capacity less than 100 kVA to cater to emergency power needs during power outages in all sectors.[50]

Captive Power Sector
Number Source Captive Power Capacity (MW) Share Electricity generated (GWh) Share
1 Coal 52,057 64.05% 169,138 86.78%
2 Hydroelectricity 132 0.14% 351 0.09%
3 Renewable energy source 4,520 4.08% 7,268 1.79%
4 Natural Gas 7,389 11.46% 21,241 9.06%
5 Oil 12,902 20.27% 2,002 2.24%
Total 70,000.00 100.00% 200,000 100.00%

Installed capacity by state or territory

This is a list of states and territories of India by installed power generation capacity.

State-wise all India installed power generation capacity as of 30 Nov 2021 [51]INCLUDING ALLOCATED SHARES IN JOINT & CENTRAL SECTOR UTILITIES
State/Union Territory Thermal (in MW) Nuclear
(in MW)
Renewable (in MW) Total
(in MW)
% of National Total % Renewable
Coal Lignite Gas Diesel Sub-Total
Thermal
Hydel Other
Renewable
Sub-Total
Renewable
Western Region 73716.27 1400 10806.49 - 85922.76 1840 7562.50 32224.30 39786.80 127549.56 32.53% 31.19%
Maharashtra 25254.18 - 3512.73 - 28766.91 690 3331.84 10566.19 13898.03 43354.94 11.05% 32.06%
Gujarat 16302.27 1400 6586.82 - 24289.09 559 772 15319.23 16,091.23 40939.32 10.44% 39.31%
Madhya Pradesh 16087.48 - 352 - 16419.48 273 3223.66 5421.24 8644.90 25337.38 6.46% 34.12%
Chhattisgarh 12221.89 - - - 12221.89 48 233 852.58 1085.58 13355.47 3.40% 8.13%
Goa 492.27 - 67.67 - 559.94 26 2 18.88 20.88 606.82 0.15% 3.44%
Dadra & Nagar Haveli 422.44 - 66.34 - 488.78 9 - 5.46 5.46 503.24 0.12% 1.08%
Daman & Diu 164.74 - 43.34 - 208.08 7 - 40.72 40.72 255.80 0.06% 15.92%
Central – Unallocated 2771 197.59 2968.59 228 3196.59 0.81% 0.00%
Southern Region 44904.52 3640 6491.80 433.66 55469.99 3320 11819.83 45947.33 57767.16 116557.15 29.73% 49.56%
Tamil Nadu 11832.99 1767.30 1027.18 211.70 14839.17 1448 2,178 15869.19 18047.39 34334.56 8.75% 52.56%
Karnataka 9846.30 471.90 - 25.20 10343.40 698 3631.60 15763.29 19394.89 30436.29 7.76% 63.72%
Andhra Pradesh 10430.71 180.23 4066.72 36.80 14714.46 127.27 1673.60 9190.51 10864.11 25705.84 6.55% 42.26%
Telangana 9168.80 210.57 831.82 - 10211.19 148.73 2479.93 4479.38 6959.31 17319.23 4.41% 40.18%
Kerala 2058.92 314.20 533.58 159.96 3066.66 362 1856.50 632.91 2489.41 5918.07 1.50% 42.06%
Puducherry 140.80 111.80 32.50 - 285.10 86 - 12.05 12.05 383.15 0.09% 3.14%
NLC - 166 - - 166 - - - - 166 0.04% 0.00%
Central – Unallocated 1426 418 1844 450 2294 0.58% 0.00%
Northern Region 55407.31 1580 5781.26 - 62768.57 1620 20433.77 23676.31 44110 108498.65 27.67% 40.65%
Rajasthan 11599.59 1580 824.90 - 14004.49 556.74 1939.19 13988.34 15927.53 30488.76 7.77% 52.24%
Uttar Pradesh 19753.84 - 549.49 - 20303.33 289.48 3424.03 4352.34 7776.37 28369.18 7.23% 27.41%
Punjab 8315.50 - 414.01 - 8729.51 196.81 3809.12 1763.44 5572.56 14498.89 3.69% 38.43%
Haryana 8636.58 - 685.61 - 9322.19 100.94 2318.52 1086.88 3405.40 12828.52 3.27% 26.55%
Delhi 4405.51 - 2115.41 - 6520.93 102.83 723.09 263.12 986.21 7609.97 1.94% 12.96%
Himachal Pradesh 151.69 - 62.01 - 213.70 28.95 3068.88 1023.19 4092.07 4334.72 1.10% 94.40%
Uttarakhand 491.60 - 519.66 - 1011.26 31.24 1975.89 906.56 2882.45 3924.95 1.00% 73.44%
Jammu and Kashmir & Ladakh 577.14 - 304.07 - 881.22 67.98 2321.88 238.99 2560.87 3510.07 0.89% 72.96%
Chandigarh 44.83 - 15.03 - 59.86 8.01 101.71 53.45 155.16 223.02 0.05% 69.57%
Central – Unallocated 1431.03 291.05 1722.08 237.03 751.45 751.45 2710.57 0.69% 27.72%
Eastern Region 27866.38 - 100 27966.38 - 4752.12 1721.34 6473.46 34439.84 8.78% 18.80%
West Bengal 9097.34 - 100 - 9197.34 - 1396 584.90 1980.90 11178.24 2.85% 17.72%
Odisha 5027.21 - - - 5027.21 - 2150.92 596.34 2747.26 7774.47 1.98% 35.34%
Bihar 6528.21 - - - 6528.21 - 110 386.93 496.93 7025.14 1.79% 7.07%
DVC 3247.02 - - 3247.02 - 186.20 186.20 3433.21 0.87% 5.42%
Jharkhand 2426.50 - - - 2426.50 - 191 96.42 287.42 2713.92 0.69% 10.59%
Sikkim 50.27 - - - 50.27 - 633 56.75 689.75 740.02 0.18% 93.21%
Central – Unallocated 1489.83 1489.83 85.01 85.01 1574.84 0.40% 5.40%
North-Eastern Region 770.02 - 1719.96 36 2525.98 - 1944 424.02 2368.02 4893.99 1.24% 48.39%
Assam 402.52 - 764.92 - 1167.44 - 522.08 104.68 626.76 1794.20 0.45% 34.93%
Arunachal Pradesh 37.05 - 46.82 - 83.87 - 544.55 142.34 686.89 770.76 0.19% 89.12%
Tripura 56.10 - 573.95 - 630.05 - 68.49 30.88 99.37 729.42 0.18% 13.62%
Meghalaya 51.60 - 109.69 - 161.29 - 409.27 50.43 459.70 620.99 0.15% 74.03%
Manipur 47.10 - 71.57 36 154.67 - 95.34 17.63 112.97 267.64 0.06% 42.21%
Mizoram 31.05 - 40.46 - 71.51 - 97.94 44.35 142.29 213.80 0.05% 66.55%
Nagaland 32.10 - 48.93 - 81.03 - 66.33 33.71 100.04 181.07 0.04% 55.25%
Central – Unallocated 112.50 63.62 176.12 140 140 316.12 0.08% 44.29%
Islands 40.5 40.5 38.01 38.01 78.06 0.01% 48.69%
Andaman and Nicobar Islands 40.5 40.5 34.74 34.74 74.79 0.01% 46.45%
Lakshadweep 3.27 3.27 3.27 0.00% 100.00%
Total 202664.50 6620 24899.51 509.71 234693.72 6780 46512.22 104031.31 150543.53 392017.24 100.00% 38.40%

Other Renewable Energy sources include SHP (Small Hydro Power – hydel plants ≤ 25 MW), Biomass Power, Urban & Industrial waste, Solar and Wind Energy

Demand

 
Electricity Generation from 1985 to 2012
 
Electricity generation in India from 2009 to 2019 (data source: powermin.nic.in)

Demand trend

During the fiscal year 2019–20, the utility energy availability was 1,284.44 billion KWh, a shortfall relative to requirements by 6.5 billion KWh (−0.5%). Peak load met was 182,533 MW, 1,229 MW (−0.6%) below requirements. In the 2020 Load Generation Balance report, India's Central Electricity Authority anticipated energy surplus and peak surplus to be 2.7% and 9.1%, respectively, for the 2020–21 fiscal year.[52] Power would be made available to few states expected to face shortages from states with a surplus, through regional transmission links.[53] From the calendar year 2015 onwards, power generation in India has been less of a problem than power distribution.[54][27][28][55][56]

Demand drivers

Nearly 0.07% of Indian households (0.2 million) have no access to electricity.[1] The International Energy Agency estimates India will add between 600 GW to 1,200 GW of additional new power generation capacity before 2050.[57] This added new capacity is similar in scale to the 740 GW total power generation capacity of the European Union (EU-27) in 2005. The technologies and fuel sources India adopts as it adds this electricity generation capacity may have a significant impact on global resource usage and environmental issues.[58] The demand for electricity for cooling (HVAC) is projected to grow rapidly.[59]

According to the analysis presented in the India Cooling Action Plan (ICAP) released by the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change, only 8 percent of Indian households own air-conditioning units. The cooling demand across India is projected to rise at a rate of 15-20 percent annually and aggregated cooling demand will grow to around eight times by 2037-38, as compared to the 2017-18 baseline. In India, 45 percent of the country’s peak electricity demand in 2050 is expected to come from space cooling alone.[60]

About 136 million Indians (11%) use traditional fuels – firewood, agricultural waste and dry animal dung fuel – for cooking and general heating needs.[61] These traditional fuels are burnt in cook stoves, sometimes known as chulah or chulha.[62] Traditional fuel is an inefficient source of energy, and its burning releases high levels of smoke, PM10 particulate matter, NOx, SO
x
, PAHs, polyaromatics, formaldehyde, carbon monoxide and other air pollutants, affecting outdoor air quality, haze and smog, chronic health problems, damage to forests, ecosystems and global climate.[63][64][65] The World Health Organization estimates that 300,000 to 400,000 people in India die of indoor air pollution and carbon monoxide poisoning every year because of biomass burning and use of chulahs.[66] Burning traditional fuel in conventional cook stoves is estimated to release 5–15x more pollutants than industrial combustion of coal, and is unlikely to be replaced until electricity or clean-burning fuel and combustion technologies become reliably available and widely adopted in rural and urban India. The growth of the electricity sector in India may help find a sustainable alternative to traditional fuel burning.

In addition to air pollution problems, a 2007 study finds that discharge of untreated sewage is the single most important cause for pollution of surface and groundwater in India. The majority of government-owned sewage treatment plants remain closed most of the time in part because of the lack of a reliable electricity supply to operate the plants. Uncollected waste accumulates in urban areas, causing unhygienic conditions, and release heavy metals and pollutants that leaches to surface and groundwater.[67][68] A reliable supply of electricity is required to address India's water pollution and associated environmental issues.

Other drivers for India's electricity sector are its rapidly growing economy, rising exports, improving infrastructure and increasing household incomes.

Adding to it, the recent coal crisis has raised an alarm as over 60 per cent of the electricity produced in the country is derived from thermal power plants, and thus, depend on coal.[69]

Growth of Electricity Consumption in India[7][3]
Year* Population
(millions)[70]
Consumption
(GWh)
% of Total Per-Capita Consumption
(in kWh)
Domestic Commercial Industrial Traction Agriculture Misc
1947** 330 4,182 10.11% 4.26% 70.78% 6.62% 2.99% 5.24% 16.3
1950** 376 5,610 9.36% 5.51% 72.32% 5.49% 2.89% 4.44% 18.2
1956 417 10,150 9.20% 5.38% 74.03% 3.99% 3.11% 4.29% 30.9
1961 458 16,804 8.88% 5.05% 74.67% 2.70% 4.96% 3.75% 45.9
1966 508 30,455 7.73% 5.42% 74.19% 3.47% 6.21% 2.97% 73.9
1974 607 55,557 8.36% 5.38% 68.02% 2.76% 11.36% 4.13% 126.2
1979 681 84,005 9.02% 5.15% 64.81% 2.60% 14.32% 4.10% 171.6
1985 781 124,569 12.45% 5.57% 59.02% 2.31% 16.83% 3.83% 228.7
1990 870 195,098 15.16% 4.89% 51.45% 2.09% 22.58% 3.83% 329.2
1997 997 315,294 17.53% 5.56% 44.17% 2.09% 26.65% 4.01% 464.6
2002 1089 374,670 21.27% 6.44% 42.57% 2.16% 21.80% 5.75% 671.9
2007 1179 525,672 21.12% 7.65% 45.89% 2.05% 18.84% 4.45% 559.2
2012 1,220 785,194 22.00% 8.00% 45.00% 2.00% 18.00% 5.00% 883.6
2013 1,235 824,301 22.29% 8.83% 44.40% 1.71% 17.89% 4.88% 914.4
2014 1,251 881,562 22.95% 8.80% 43.17% 1.75% 18.19% 5.14% 957
2015 1,267 938,823 23.53% 8.77% 42.10% 1.79% 18.45% 5.37% 1010
2016 1,283 1,001,191 23.86% 8.59% 42.30% 1.66% 17.30% 6.29% 1075
2017 1,325 1,066,268 24.32% 9.22% 40.01% 1.61% 18.33% 6.50% 1122
2018 1,338 1,130,244 24.20% 8.51% 41.48% 1.27% 18.08% 6.47% 1149
2019 1,352 1,196,309 24.76% 8.24% 41.16% 1.52% 17.69% 6.63% 1181
2020 1,365 1,291,494 24.01% 8.04% 42.69% 1.52% 17.67% 6.07% 1208
2021[46] 1,380 1,227,000 25.67% 8.31% 41.09% 1.51% 17.52% 5.89% 1139

* Data from fiscal year ending on 31 March of each year.
** Refers to fiscal year ending on 31 December.

Note: Per Capita Consumption=(gross electricity generation by all sources plus net import) / mid year population. 'Consumption' is 'gross electricity generation by all sources plus net import' after subtracting transmission loses and auxiliary consumption in electricity generation.

The per capita annual domestic electricity consumption in India during the year 2009 was 96 kWh in rural areas and 288 kWh in urban areas for those with access to electricity. Globally the per capita annual average is 2,600 kWh and in the European Union it is 6,200 kWh.[71]

Rural and Urban electrification

India's Ministry of Power launched Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Gram Jyoti Yojana (DDUGJY) as one of its flagship programmes in July 2015 with the objective of providing round the clock power to rural areas. The programe focused on reforms in the rural power sector by separating feeder lines for rural households from those for agricultural applications, and strengthening transmission and distribution infrastructure. A previous scheme for rural electrification, Rajiv Gandhi Grameen Vidyutikaran Yojana (RGGVY) was subsumed into the new scheme.[72] As of 28 April 2018, 12 days ahead of the target date, all Indian villages (a total of 597,464 census villages) were electrified.[73]

India has also achieved close to 100% electrification of all rural and urban households. As of 4 January 2019, 211.88 million rural households were provided with electricity, close to 100% of the 212.65 million total rural households.[1] As of 4 January 2019, 42.937 million urban households are provided with electricity, close to 100% of the 42.941 million total urban households.

Per-Capita consumption

Electricity generation (utility sector) by source in India in FY 2021-2022
Coal in IndiaHydroelectric power in IndiaSmall Hydro: 10,463 GWh (0.7%)Wind Power: 68,640 GWh (4.6%)Solar power in IndiaBiomass & other RE: 18,324 GWh (1.2%)Nuclear power in IndiaGas: 36,143 GWh (2.4%)Diesel: 115 GWh (0.0%) 
  •   Coal: 1,078,444 GWh (72.7%)
  •   Large Hydro: 151,695 GWh (10.2%)
  •   Small Hydro: 10,463 GWh (0.7%)
  •   Wind Power: 68,640 GWh (4.6%)
  •   Solar Power: 73,483 GWh (5.0%)
  •   Biomass & other RE: 18,324 GWh (1.2%)
  •   Nuclear: 47,019 GWh (3.2%)
  •   Gas: 36,143 GWh (2.4%)
  •   Diesel: 115 GWh (0.0%)
Electricity consumption per capita in 2020–2021[74][75]
State/Union territory Per-capita
consumption
(kWh)
Total
sales
(TWh)
Domestic
sales
(TWh)
Industrial HV
sales
(TWh)
Industrial MV
& LV sales
(TWh)
Agriculture
sales
(TWh)
Commercial
sales
(TWh)
Dadra and Nagar Haveli 12,250 5.28 0.14 4.89 0.19 0.04 0.32
Daman and Diu 5,914 2.13
Goa 3,736 3.70
Gujarat 2,239 92.27 16.51 41.12 14.60 12.66 4.31
Chhattisgarh 2,211 23.36 6.44 7.51 0.60 5.90 1.41
Maharashtra 1,588 126.42 30.19 34.15 9.88 33.91 9.54
Madhya Pradesh 1,232 60.95 16.79 9.24 1.29 25.64 3.37
Western Region 1,736 314.13 71.49 100.49 26.87 78.16 19.15
Puducherry 2,138 2.60
Tamil Nadu 1,714 94.59 32.72 23.51 9.33 13.97 8.97
Andhra Pradesh[76] 1,567 51.75 17.47 14.26 2.28 9.36 3.05
Telangana 2,126 57.89 12.80 11.24 1.22 22.26 4.84
Karnataka 1,376 62.78 15.66 9.74 1.91 22.33 6.75
Kerala 844 22.59 12.76 2.92 1.14 0.42 4.26
Lakshadweep 819 0.53
Southern Region 1,548 292.28 92.32 62.99 16.06 68.42 28.09
Punjab 2,350 50.28 15.32 12.58 3.13 13.09 3.46
Haryana 2,186 41.94 11.97 10.75 2.04 10.08 4.00
Delhi 1,684 26.39 16.43 0.47 2.34 0.39 5.31
Himachal Pradesh 1,742 8.63 2.35 4.68 0.08 0.07 0.51
Uttarakhand 1,520 11.22 3.20 5.44 0.26 0.18 1.33
Chandigarh 1,529 1.34
Jammu and Kashmir 1,475 9.98 4.88 0.92 0.23 0.36 1.70
Rajasthan 1,345 64.88 14.25 11.53 2.11 28.52 4.09
Uttar Pradesh 663 93.60 43.95 10.25 3.98 18.93 6.28
Northern Region 1,137 308.23 113.09 56.76 14.32 71.30 27.06
Odisha 2,264 20.60 8.42 6.02 0.40 0.64 2.15
Sikkim 1011 0.41
Jharkhand 867 21.37 6.47 11.83 0.30 0.20 1.03
West Bengal 733 48.39 17.53 15.58 2.14 1.33 5.45
Andaman and Nicobar 878 0.24
Bihar 329 24.10 15.04 2.76 0.80 1.14 2.39
Eastern Region 807 115.15 47.74 36.45 3.68 3.33 11.12
Arunachal Pradesh 645 0.40
Meghalaya 751 1.32
Mizoram 582 0.45
Nagaland 433 0.68
Tripura 435 0.98
Assam 384 7.35 3.78 1.57 0.12 0.39 1.09
Manipur 362 0.65
North Eastern Region 426 11.86 6.15 2.35 0.23 0.09 1.52
National 1,255 1042.66 330.81 259.06 62.16 221.30 86.95

Notes: Per capita consumption = (gross electricity generation + net import) / mid-year population. Nearly a 24% difference between sales and gross generation due to auxiliary power consumption of thermal power plants and transmission and distribution (T&D) losses, etc.

Electricity generation

India has recorded rapid growth in electricity generation since 1985, increasing from 179 TW-hr in 1985 to 1,057 TW-hr in 2012.[77] The majority of the increase came from coal-fired plants and non-conventional renewable energy sources (RES), with the contribution from natural gas, oil, and hydro plants decreasing in 2012–2017. The gross utility electricity generation (excluding imports from Bhutan) was 1,384 billion kWh in 2019–20, representing 1.0% annual growth compared to 2018–2019. The contribution from renewable energy sources was nearly 20% of the total. In 2019–20, all the incremental electricity generation is contributed by renewable energy sources as the power generation from fossil fuels decreased.[78] During the year 2020–2021, the utility power generation has decreased by 0.8% (11.3 billion kWh) with a reduction in power generation from fossil fuels by 1% and power generation from non-fossil sources is more or less same of the previous year. In 2020–21, India exported more electricity than it imported from neighboring countries.[79] Solar power generation in 2020–21, occupied third place after coal and hydropower generations surpassing wind, gas and nuclear power generations.

Yearly gross electricity generation by source (GWh)
Year Fossil Fuel Nuclear Hydro* Sub
total
RES[80] Utility and Captive Power
Coal Oil Gas Mini
hydro
Solar Wind Bio
mass
Other Sub
total
Utility Captive
(see Table above)
Misc Total
2011–12 612,497 2,649 93,281 32,286 130,511 871,224 na na na na na 51,226 922,451 134,387 na 1,056,838
2012–13 691,341 2,449 66,664 32,866 113,720 907,040 na na na na na 57,449 964,489 144,009 na 1,108,498
2013–14 746,087 1,868 44,522 34,228 134,847 961,552 na 3,350 na na na 59,615 1,021,167 156,643 na 1,177,810
2014–15 835,838 1,407 41,075 36,102 129,244 1,043,666 8,060 4,600 28,214 14,944 414 61,780 1,105,446 166,426 na 1,271,872
2015–16[81] 896,260 406 47,122 37,413 121,377 1,102,578 8,355 7,450 28,604 16,681 269 65,781 1,168,359 183,611 na 1,351,970
2016–17[82] 944,861 275 49,094 37,916 122,313 1,154,523 7,673 12,086 46,011 14,159 213 81,869 1,236,392 197,000 na 1,433,392
2017–18[83] 986,591 386 50,208 38,346 126,123 1,201,653 5,056 25,871 52,666 15,252 358 101,839 1,303,493 183,000 na 1,486,493
2018–19[3] 1,021,997 129 49,886 37,706 135,040 1,244,758 8,703 39,268 62,036 16,325 425 126,757 1,371,517 175,000 na 1,546,517
2019–20[7] 994,197 199 48,443 46,472 155,769 1,245,080 9,366 50,103 64,639 13,843 366 138,337[84] 1,383,417 239,567 na 1,622,983
2020–21[46] 981,239 129 51,027 42,949 150,305 1,225,649 10,258 60,402 60,150 14,816 1621 147,247[85] 1,373,187 200,000 na 1,573,187
2021–22[86] 1,078,444 115 36,143 47,019 151,695 1,313,418 10,463 73,483 68,640 16,056 2,268 170,912[87] 1,484,330 na

Notes: Coal includes lignite; Misc: includes contributions from emergency diesel generator sets, roof top solar, captive power generation from below 1 MW capacity plants, etc.; *Hydro includes pumped storage generation; na = data not available.

Thermal power

 
NTPC thermal power plant in Sipat, Chhattisgarh
 
A thermal power plant in Maharashtra

Pollution from coal-based power plants

 
(in million tonnes)

In India the Commercial Energy makes 74% of total energy, of which coal based energy production is around 72–75%, as per 2020 data. For utility power generation, India consumed 622.22 million tons of coal during 2019–20 which is less by 1% compared to 628.94 million tons during 2018–19. However coal imports for utility power generation increased by 12.3% during year 2019–20 at 69.22 million tons from 61.66 million tons during 2018–19.[88] A large part of the Indian coal reserve is similar to Gondwana coal: it is of low calorific value and high ash content, with poor fuel value. On average, Indian coal has a gross calorific value (GCV) of about 4500 Kcal/kg, whereas in Australia, for example, the GCV is about 6500 Kcal/kg .[89] The result is that Indian power plants using India's coal supply consume about 0.7 kg of coal per kWh of power generation, whereas in the United States thermal power plants consume about 0.45 kg of coal per kWh. In 2017, India imported nearly 130 Mtoe (nearly 200 million tons) of steam coal and coking coal, 29% of total consumption, to meet the demand in electricity, cement and steel production.[8][90]

The Centre for Science and Environment has assessed the Indian coal-based power sector as one of the most resource-wasteful and polluting sectors in the world, in part due to the high ash content in India's coal.[91] India's Ministry of Environment and Forests has therefore mandated the use of coals whose ash content has been reduced to 34% (or lower) in power plants in urban, ecologically sensitive and other critically polluted areas. The coal ash reduction industry has grown rapidly in India, with current capacity topping 90 megatonnes.[when?][citation needed]

Before a thermal power plant is approved for construction and commissioning in India it must undergo an extensive review process that includes environmental impact assessment.[92] The Ministry of Environment and Forests has produced a technical guidance manual to help project proposers avoid environmental pollution from thermal power plants.[93] As of 2016, the existing coal-fired power stations in the utility and captive power sectors were estimated to require nearly 12.5 million INR per MW capacity to install pollution control equipment to comply with the latest emission norms set out by the Ministry of Environment and Forests.[94][95][96][97] Most of the coal fired stations have not complied installation of flue gas de-sulphurisation units for reducing the pollution.[98] In April 2020, CPCB declared that over 42,000 MW thermal power plants have outlived their lives.[99] India has also banned imports of pet coke for use as fuel.[100] As a signatory to the Paris Agreement, India is also reducing power generation from coal to control the emission of greenhouse gases.[101]

The state and central power generation companies are permitted by the Government of India to minimize the cost of coal transportation using flexible coal linkage swaps from inefficient plants to efficient plants, and from plants situated far from coal mines to plants close to the pit head, leading to a reduction in the cost of power.[102] Although coal imports for consumption in the utility sector are declining, the overall imports of steam coal are increasing as the local coal production is unable to meet the requirements of coal-fired captive power plants.[103][104] India is introducing single spot auctions/exchanges for all type of coal consumers.[105]

Retirement of old thermal power plants

 
A thermal power plant in Rajasthan

India's coal-fired, oil-fired and natural gas-fired thermal power plants are inefficient and replacing them with cheaper renewable technologies offers significant potential for greenhouse gas (CO2) emission reduction. India's thermal power plants emit 50% to 120% more CO2 per kWh produced compared to average emissions from their European Union (EU-27) counterparts.[106] The central government plans to retire coal-based plants that are at least 25 years old and contributing excessive pollution, totalling 11,000 MW of capacity.[107] As of 2018 there is no similar retirement plan for the captive power sector. In 2020 Carbon Tracker estimated that phasing out 20 years or more old coal-fired plants and the coal fired plants under construction with electricity sale price exceeding INR 4/kWh with new renewables is more economical as these coal fired plants are imposing heavy financial burden on Discoms.[108]

Some diesel generator plants and gas turbine plants were also decommissioned in 2016 though they are best suitable for catering ancillary services.[109]

Integration of renewable power

India has committed to install 275,000 MW renewable energy capacity by 2027.[110] The existing base load coal and gas based power plants need to be flexible enough to accommodate the variable renewable energy. Also ramping up, ramping down, warm start up, hot start up capabilities of existing coal based power stations are critical to accommodate the frequent variations in renewable power generation.[111][112] It is also examined to use the retired coal based electric generators as synchronous condensers for improving the grid inertia when it is dominated by static power generation sources like solar and wind power.[113] As the solar power plants remain idle during the night hours, reactive power capability of the inverters installed as part of the solar power plant can also be used during the night time for solving the problem of very high voltage which occurs due to low loads on the transmission lines.[114]

Natural gas supply constraints

The installed capacity of natural gas-based power plants (including the plants ready to be commissioned with the commencement of natural gas supply) was nearly 26,765 MW at the end of the financial year 2014–15. These plants were operating at an overall plant load factor (PLF) of 22% due to a severe shortage of natural gas in the country,[115] and the fact that imported liquid natural gas (LNG) was too expensive for power generation. Many power stations were shut down throughout the year for a lack of natural gas supply.[116] The natural gas shortage for power sector alone was nearly 100 million cubic metre per day at standard conditions.[117] The break-even price for switching from imported coal to LNG in electricity generation was estimated to be approximately US$6 per million British thermal units ($20/MWh) (thermal energy).[118] The Indian government has taken steps to enhance power generation from gas-based power plants by waiving import duties and taxes.[119][120]

 
Gasification of Char/Coal

Gasification of coal or lignite or pet coke or biomass produces synthetic natural gas or syngas (also known as coal gas or wood gas) which is a mixture of hydrogen, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide gases.[121] Coal gas can be converted into synthetic natural gas by using the Fischer–Tropsch process at low pressure and high temperature. Coal gas can also be produced by underground coal gasification if the coal deposits are located deep in the ground or it is uneconomical to mine the coal.[122] Synthetic natural gas production technologies promise to dramatically improve India's supply of natural gas.[123] The Dankuni coal complex produces syngas that is piped to industrial users in Calcutta.[124] Many coal-based fertiliser plants can also be economically retrofitted to produce synthetic natural gas. It is estimated that the production cost for syngas could be below US$6 per million British thermal units ($20/MWh).[125][126]

Earlier, natural gas use in power generation was thought to be a bridge fuel as it emits far less CO2 (below 50%) when compared to coal use in power generation until renewable power generation without CO2 emissions become economical.[127] Renewable power generation is already cheaper than coal and gas fueled power generation in India. Now the bridge fuel concept is no more valid and existing gas-based generation needs to compete with the coal-based generation when there is no adequate renewable power generation (including storage and peaking type hydropower). The problem of stranded assets/capacity is more deep-rooted for gas-based power plants than that of the coal-based power plants as coal is far cheaper than natural gas in India.

Nuclear power

 
Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (2 x 1000 MW) under construction in 2009.

As of 31 March 2022, India had 6.78 GW of installed nuclear power generation capacity or nearly 1.7% of the total installed utility power generation capacity. Nuclear plants generated 47,063 million kWh at 79.24% PLF in 2021–22.[128]

India's nuclear power plant development began in 1964. India signed an agreement with General Electric (United States) for the construction and commissioning of two boiling water reactors at Tarapur. In 1967, this effort was placed under India's Department of Atomic Energy. In 1971, India set up its first pressurized heavy water reactors with Canadian collaboration in Rajasthan.

In 1987, India created the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited to commercialize nuclear power. The Nuclear Power Corporation of India is a public sector enterprise, wholly owned by the Government of India, under the administrative control of the Department of Atomic Energy. The state-owned company has ambitious plans to establish plants totalling to 63 GW generation capacity by 2032.[129]

India's nuclear power generation effort is subject to many safeguards and oversights. Its environmental management system is ISO-14001 certified, and it undergoes peer review by the World Association of Nuclear Operators, including a pre-start-up peer review. The Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited commented in its annual report for 2011 that its biggest challenge is to address public and policymaker perceptions about the safety of nuclear power, particularly after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan.[130]

In 2011, India had 18 pressurized heavy water reactors in operation, with another four projects launched totaling 2.8 GW capacity. India is in the process of launching its first prototype fast breeder reactor using plutonium-based fuel obtained by reprocessing the spent fuel of first-stage reactors. The prototype reactor is located in Tamil Nadu and has a capacity of 500 MW.[131]

India has nuclear power plants operating in the following states: Maharashtra, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. These reactors have an installed electricity generation capacity of between 100 MW and 1000 MW each. The Kudankulam nuclear power plant (KNPP) is the single largest nuclear power station in India. KNPP Unit 1 with a capacity of 1000 MWe was commissioned in July 2013, while Unit 2, also with a capacity of 1000 MWe, attained criticality in 2016. Two additional units are under construction.[132] The plant has suffered multiple shutdowns, leading to calls for an expert panel to investigate.[133] First 700 MWe PHWR unit under phase II of Kakrapar Atomic Power Station achieved first criticality in July 2020 and expected to begin commercial operation by December 2022.[131][134]

In 2011, uranium was discovered in the Tummalapalle uranium mine, the country's largest uranium mine and possibly one of the world's largest. The reserves were estimated at 64,000 tonnes, and could be as large as 150,000 tonnes.[135] The mine began operation in 2012.[136]

India's share of nuclear power plant generation capacity is 1.2% of worldwide nuclear power production capacity, making it the 15th largest nuclear power producer. India aims to supply 9% of its electricity needs with nuclear power by 2032 and 25% by 2050.[130][137] Jaitapur Nuclear Power Project, India's largest nuclear power plant project, is planned to be implemented in partnership with Électricité de France under an agreement signed on 10 March 2018.[138]

India's government is developing up to 62 additional nuclear reactors, mostly using thorium fuel, which it expects to be operational by 2025. It is the "only country in the world with a detailed, funded, government-approved plan" to focus on thorium-based nuclear power.[137]

Renewable energy

 
India renewable electricity production by source
 
Mean wind speed India.[139]

On 12 August 2021, India's grid-connected electricity generation capacity reached 100 GW from non-conventional renewable technologies[43][140] and 46.21 GW from conventional renewable power or major hydroelectric power plants.As of 12 August 2021, there are about 50 GW of projects under development, and 27 GW that are tendered and yet to be auctioned.[43]

Installed capacity of non-conventional renewable power[43]
Type Capacity
(in MW)
Wind 39,247.05
Solar 40,085.47
Small Hydro Power Projects 4,786.81
Biomass Power & Gasification and Bagasse Cogeneration 10,145.93
Waste to Power 168.64
Total non-conventional renewable Power – Grid Connected 94,433.79

Hydro power

 
Indira Sagar Dam partially completed in 2008
 
Nagarjuna Sagar Dam and the 810 MW hydroelectric power plant on the Krishna River.

The hydro-electric power plants at Darjeeling and Shivanasamudra were among the first in Asia, and were established in 1898 and 1902 respectively.

India's potential for hydropower has been assessed to be about 125,570 MW at a 60% load factor.[141] India is ranked fourth globally by underutilized hydropower potential. The estimated amount of viable hydropower varies with improved technology and the cost of electricity generation from other sources. In addition, there is an estimated 6,740 MW of potential for small, mini, and micro-hydro generators and 56 sites for pumped storage schemes with an aggregate installed capacity of 94,000 MW have been identified.[142][143] In 2020, the power tariff from Solar PV clubbed with pumped storage hydro have fallen below the coal-based power plant tariffs in offering base load and peak load power supply.[144]

The installed hydropower capacity as of 31 March 2018 was approximately 45,293 MW, 13.17% of the total installed utility capacity at the time.[2] Small, mini, and micro-hydro generators add another 4,486 MW capacity.[2] The share of this sector operated by public companies is 97%.[145] Companies engaged in the development of hydroelectric power in India include the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC), Northeast Electric Power Company (NEEPCO), Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam (SJVNL), Tehri Hydro Development Corporation, and NTPC-Hydro.

Pumped storage schemes offer the potential for centralized peak power stations for load management in the electricity grid.[146][147] They also produce secondary /seasonal power at no additional cost when rivers are flooding with excess water. Storing electricity by alternative systems such as batteries, compressed air storage systems, etc. is more costly than electricity production by standby generator. India has already established nearly 4,785 MW pumped storage capacity as part of its installed hydro power plants.[148][149]

Solar power

 
Global Horizontal Irradiation in India.[150]
 
Price history of silicon PV cells (not modules) since 1977. The great thing about solar power is that it is a technology and not a fuel. It is unlimited and the more it is deployed the cheaper it would be.[151] While the more limited fossil fuels are used, the more expensive they become.

The solar energy sector in India offers potentially enormous capacity, though little of this potential has so far been exploited. Solar radiation of about 5,000 trillion kWh per year is incident over India's land mass, with average daily solar power potential of 0.25 kWh/m2 of used land area with available commercially proven technologies.[152] As of 31 December 2019, the installed capacity was 33.73 GW, or 2% of utility electricity generation.[80]

Solar power plants require nearly 2.4 hectares (0.024 km2) land per MW capacity, which is similar to coal-fired power plants when life cycle coal mining, consumptive water storage and ash disposal areas are taken into account, and hydropower plants when the submergence area of the water reservoir is included. Solar plants with 1.33 million MW capacity could be installed in India on 1% of its land (32,000 square km). Large tracts of land that are unproductive, barren and devoid of vegetation exist in all parts of India, exceeding 8% of its total area. These are potentially suitable for solar power.[153] It has been estimated that if 32,000 square km of these wastelands were used for solar power generation, 2000 billion kWh of electricity could be produced, twice the total power generated in 2013–14. At a price of 4 ₹/kWh, this would result in a land annual productivity/yield of 1.0 million (US$13,000) per acre, which compares favorably with many industrial areas and is many times more than the best productive irrigated agriculture lands.[154] Building solar power plants on marginally productive lands offers the potential for solar electricity to replace all of India's fossil fuel energy requirements (natural gas, coal, lignite, and crude oil),[155] and could offer per capita energy consumption at par with USA/Japan for the peak population expected during its demographic transition.[156]

The sale price of power generated by solar photovoltaics fell to 2.00 (2.5¢ US) per kWh in November 2020 which is lower than any other type of power generation in India.[157][158] In the same year, the levelised tariff in US$ for solar electricity fell to 1.31 cents/kWh, far below the solar PV sale tariff in India.[159] In 2020, the power tariff from Solar PV clubbed with pumped storage hydro or battery storage have fallen below the coal based power plant tariffs in offering base load and peak load power supply.[144]

 
Canal Solar Power Project in Kadi, Gujarat

Land acquisition is a challenge for solar farm projects in India. Some state governments are exploring innovative ways to address land availability, for example, by deploying solar capacity above irrigation canals.[160] This allows solar energy to be harvested while simultaneously reducing the loss of irrigation water by solar evaporation.[161] The state of Gujarat was first to implement the Canal Solar Power Project, using solar panels on a 19,000 km (12,000 mi) long network of Narmada canals across the state to generate electricity. It was the first such project in India.

Synergy with other types of power generation

A major disadvantage of solar power is that it produces electricity only in daylight, and not during nighttime or cloudy daytime. This disadvantage can be overcome by installing grid storage, such as pumped-storage hydroelectricity.[162] A proposed large-scale engineering project to interlink Indian rivers envisages coastal reservoirs for harnessing river waters that would also create pumped-storage hydropower capacity for use on daily basis by consuming the surplus solar power available during the day time.[163] Existing and future hydropower stations can also be expanded with additional pumped-storage hydroelectricity units to cater for nighttime electricity consumption. Most of the groundwater pumping power required can be met directly by solar power during the daytime.[164]

Concentrated solar power plants with thermal storage are also emerging as cheaper (US 5¢/kWh) and cleaner Load following power plants than fossil fuel power plants. They can respond to demand round the clock, and work as base load power plants when there is excess solar energy. A mix of solar thermal and solar photovoltaic plants offers the potential to match load fluctuations without requiring costly battery storage.

Wind power

 
Wind farm in Rajasthan.
 
Wind turbines midst India's agricultural farms.
 
Wind farms midst paddy fields in India.
 
Biomass pellet fuel from India

India has the fourth largest installed wind power capacity in the world. The development of wind power in India began in the 1990s in Tamil Nadu and significantly increased in the last decade. As of 31 August 2022, the installed capacity of wind power was 41.205 GW, spread across many states of India.[140][165] The largest wind power generating state is Tamil Nadu, accounting for nearly 23% of installed capacity, followed in decreasing order by Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Karnataka.[165][166]

In 2015–16, wind power accounted for 8.5% of India's total installed power capacity, and 2.5% of the country's power output. India aims to install a total 60 GW of wind power capacity by 2022.[167][168] The wind power tariff of around 2.5 INR/kWh is the cheapest of all power generation sources in India.[169]

The offshore wind power potential of India is nearly 112 GW up to 50 metres water depth and nearly 195 GW up to 1000 metres water depth.[170] As of August 2022, no offshore wind power installation is under construction or in operation. The levelised cost of electricity (LCOE) has fallen to US$ 50 per MWh for offshore wind power plants.[170]

Biomass power

Biomass is organic matter from living organisms. As a renewable energy source, biomass can either be used directly via combustion to produce heat, or indirectly after converting it to various forms of biofuel using a range of methods which are broadly classified into thermal, chemical, and biochemical methods. Biomass, bagasse, forestry, domestic organic wastes, industrial organic wastes, organic residue from biogas plants, and agricultural residue and waste can all be used as fuel to produce electricity.[171][172] Nearly 750 million tons of biomass that is not edible by cattle is available annually in India.[173][174]

The total use of biomass to produce heat in India was nearly 177 Mtoe in 2013.[175] 20% of households in India use biomass and charcoal for cooking purposes. This traditional use of biomass is being replaced by liquefied petroleum gas in rural areas, resulting in increased burning of biomass in fields, This has become a major source of air pollution in nearby towns and cities.[176][173]

Torrefied biomass

Large quantities of imported coal are being used in pulverised coal-fired power stations. Raw biomass cannot be used directly in the pulverised coal mills as it is difficult to grind into fine powder due to caking. However, torrefaction makes it possible for biomass to replace coal.[177] The hot flue gas of existing coal-fired power stations can be used as a heat source for torrefaction, so that biomass can be cofired with coal.[178][179] Surplus agriculture/crop residue biomass is beginning to be used for this purpose.[180][181] Instead of shutting down/ retirement of coal-fired power plants due to concerns over pollution, it has been argued that these units can be retrofitted economically to produce electricity from biomass.[182][183] Biomass contains substantial oxygen and lesser ash to make retrofitting of old units less capital intensive. Biomass power plants can also sell Renewable Energy Certificates, increasing their profitability.[184][185] Cofiring of biomass up to 10% with coal in existing pulverised coal-fired power stations is successfully implemented in India.[186][187] Central Government has made cofiring (minimum 5%) of biomass mandatary from October 2022 in all coal fired plants.[188][189]

Biogas

In 2011, India started a new initiative to demonstrate the utility of medium-size mixed feed biogas-fertilizer pilot plants. The government approved 21 projects with an aggregate capacity of 37,016 cubic meters per day, of which 2 projects were successfully commissioned by December 2011.[190] India commissioned a further 158 projects under its Biogas-based Distributed/Grid Power Generation program, with a total installed capacity of about 2 MW. In 2018, India has set a target of producing 15 million tons of biogas/bio-CNG by installing 5,000 large-scale commercial-type biogas plants which can produce daily 12.5 tons of bio-CNG by each plant.[191] As of May 2022, nearly 35 such plants are in operation.[192] Rejected organic solids from biogas plants can be used in coal plants after torrefaction.

Biogas is primarily methane, and can also be used to generate protein-rich feed for cattle, poultry and fish by growing Methylococcus capsulatus, a bacterium that grows directly on methane. This can be done economically in villages with low requirements for land and water.[193][194][195] The carbon dioxide gas produced as a by-product from these units can be used in cheaper production of algae oil or spirulina from algae cultivation, which may eventually substitute for crude oil.[196][197] Using biogas for protein-rich feed production is also eligible for carbon credits as this sequesters carbon from the atmosphere.[198] There is significant potential to extract useful biomass from breweries, textile mills, fertilizer plants, the paper, and pulp industry, solvent extraction units, rice mills, petrochemical plants and other industries.[199]

The government is exploring several ways to use agro waste or biomass in rural areas to improve the rural economy.[200][201] For example, biomass gasifier technologies are being explored to produce power from surplus biomass resources such as rice husk, crop stalks, small wood chips and other agro-residues in rural areas. The largest biomass-based power plant in India at Sirohi, Rajasthan has a capacity of 20 MW. During 2011, India installed 25 rice husk based gasifier systems for distributed power generation in 70 remote villages of Bihar, including a total of 1.20 MW in Gujarat and 0.5 MW in Tamil Nadu. In addition, gasifier systems were installed at 60 rice mills in India.[190]

Geothermal energy

India's geothermal energy installed capacity is experimental, and commercial use is insignificant. According to some estimates, India has 10,600 MW of geothermal energy available.[202] The resource map for India has been grouped into six geothermal provinces:[203]

India has about 340 hot springs spread over the country. Of these, 62 are distributed along the northwest Himalaya, in the states of Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand. They are found concentrated in a 30-50-km wide thermal band mostly along the river valleys. The Naga-Lusai and West Coast Provinces also manifest a series of thermal springs. The Andaman and Nicobar arc is the only place in India where volcanic activity continues, potentially a good site for geothermal energy. The Cambay geothermal belt is 200 km long and 50 km wide, with Tertiary sediments. Thermal springs have been reported from the belt although they are not of very high temperature or flow levels. High subsurface temperature and thermal fluid have been reported in deep drill wells in depth ranges of 1.7 to 1.9  km during drilling in this area. Steam blowout has also been reported in drill holes in a depth range of 1.5 to 3.4  km. The thermal springs in India's peninsular region are more related to the faults, which allow water to circulate to considerable depths. The circulating water acquires heat from the normal thermal gradient in the area, and can emerge at a high temperature.[203]

In a December 2011 report, India identified six promising geothermal sites for the development of geothermal energy. In decreasing order of potential, these are:

  • Tattapani (Chhattisgarh)
  • Puga (Jammu & Kashmir)
  • Cambay Graben (Gujarat)
  • Manikaran (Himachal Pradesh)
  • Surajkund (Haryana)
  • Chhumathang (Jammu & Kashmir)

Puga and Chumathang area in Ladakh are deemed as the most promising geothermal fields in India. These areas were discovered in 1970s and initial exploratory efforts were made in the 1980s by Geological Survey of India (GSI). On 6 February 2021, the ONGC Energy Center (OEC) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Ladakh and the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council, Leh in the presence of current Lieutenant governor Radha Krishna Mathur.[204]

Tidal power

Tidal power, also called tidal energy, is a form of hydropower that converts energy obtained from tides into useful forms of power, mainly electricity. Local effects such as shelving, funneling, reflection and resonance can increase the potential of tidal energy in certain regions.

India's potential to harness tidal energy is significant. Energy can be extracted from tides in several ways. In one method, a reservoir is created behind a barrier, or barrage, and tidal waters are allowed to pass through turbines in the barrier to generate electricity. This method requires mean tidal differences greater than 4 metres and favourable topographical conditions to keep installation costs low. The Gulf of Khambhat and the Gulf of Kutch on India's west coast, with maximum tidal ranges of 11 m and 8 m, respectively, and an average tidal range of 6.77 m and 5.23 m, are promising sites for this type of technology. The Ganges Delta in the Sundarbans, West Bengal is another possibility, although it offers significantly less recoverable energy; the maximum tidal range in Sunderbans is approximately 5 m with an average tidal range of 2.97 m. It is estimated that barrage technology could harvest about 8 GW from tidal energy in India, primarily in Gujarat.[citation needed] The barrage approach has several disadvantages, however, one being that a badly engineered barrage can have significant negative effects on migratory fishes, marine ecosystems and aquatic life.[citation needed] Integrated barrage technology plants can also be expensive to build. In December 2011, the Ministry of New & Renewable Energy, Government of India and the Renewable Energy Development Agency of West Bengal jointly approved and agreed to implement India's first 3.75 MW Durgaduani mini tidal power project.[205]

Another tidal wave technology harvests energy from surface waves or from pressure fluctuations below the sea surface. A report from the Ocean Engineering Centre, at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras estimated the annual wave energy potential along the Indian coast is 5 to 15 MW/metre, suggesting a theoretical maximum potential for electricity harvesting along India's 7500-kilometer coastline of about 40 GW.[206] However, the realistic economical potential is likely to be considerably less than this.[206] A significant barrier to surface energy harvesting is that its equipment may interfere with fishing and other sea-bound vessels, particularly in unsettled weather. India built its first surface energy harvesting technology demonstration plant in Vizhinjam, near Thiruvananthapuram.[citation needed]

The third approach to harvesting tidal energy is ocean thermal energy technology. This approach harvests the solar energy trapped in ocean waters. Oceans have a thermal gradient, the surface being much warmer than the deeper levels of the ocean. This thermal gradient may be harvested using the modified Rankine cycle. India's National Institute of Ocean Technology (NIOT) has attempted this approach without success. In 2003, NIOT attempted to build and deploy a 1 MW demonstration plant with Saga University of Japan,[207] but mechanical problems prevented success. After initial tests near Kerala, the unit was scheduled for redeployment and further development in the Lakshadweep Islands in 2005.[citation needed]

Electricity transmission and distribution

 
Electricity transmission grid in eastern India.
 
A tower supporting a 220 kV transmission line near Ennore, Chennai

As of 2013, India has a single wide area synchronous grid that covers the entire country except distant islands.[208]

Installed transmission lines and distribution capacity (MVA) as of 31 July 2018[209][210]
Capacity Substations
(MVA)
Transmission lines
(circuit km)
c.km / MVA ratio[211]
HVDC ± 220 kV & above 22,500 15,556 0.691
765 kV 197,500 36,673 0.185
400 kV 292,292 173,172 0.707
220 kV 335,696 170,748 0.592
220 kV & above 847,988 396,149 0.467
India lit up at night. This image, courtesy of NASA, was taken by the crew of Expedition 29 on 21 October 2011. It starts over Turkmenistan, moving east. India begins past the long wavy solid orange line, marking the lights at the India-Pakistan borderline. New Delhi, India's capital and the Kathiawar Peninsula are lit. So are Mumbai, Hyderabad, Chennai, Bangalore and many smaller cities in central and southern India, as this International Space Station's video shifts south-eastward through southern India, into the Bay of Bengal. Lightning storms are also present, represented by the flashing lights throughout the video. The pass ends over western Indonesia.

The total length of high voltage (HV) transmission lines (220kV and above) would be enough to form a square matrix of area 266 km2 (i.e. a square grid 16.3 km on a side, so that on average there is at least one HV line within a distance of 8.15 km) over the entire area of the country. This represents a total of almost 20% more HV transmission lines than that of the United States (322,000 km (200,000 mi) of 230 kV and above). However the Indian grid transmits far less electricity.[212] The installed length of transmission lines of 66 kV and above is 649,833 km (403,788 mi) (on average, there is at least one ≥66 kV transmission line within 4.95 km across the country).[3] The length of secondary transmission lines (400 V and above) is 10,381,226 km (6,450,595 mi) as of 31 March 2018.[3] The spread of total transmission lines (≥400 V) would be sufficient to form a square matrix of area 0.36 km2 (i.e. on average, at least one transmission line within 0.31 km distance) over the entire area of the country. In a future grid dominated by decentralized power generation like solar and wind power, unscientific expansion of the electrical grid would yield negative results due to braess paradox.[213]

The all-time maximum peak load met was 182,610 MW on 30 May 2019.[214] The maximum achieved demand factor of substations is nearly 60% at the 220 kV level. However, the operational performance of the system is not satisfactory in meeting peak electricity loads.[215][216] This has led to the initiation of detailed forensic engineering studies, with a plan to make capital investments in a smart grid that maximises the utility of the existing transmission infrastructure.[49]

The introduction of an availability based tariff (ABT) originally helped to stabilize the Indian transmission grids.[citation needed] However, as the grid transitions to power surplus the ABT has become less useful. The July 2012 blackout, affecting the north of the country, was the largest power grid failure in history as measured by the number of people affected.[citation needed]

India's aggregate transmission and commercial (ATC) losses were nearly 21.35% in 2017–18.[217][3][218] This compares unfavorably to the total ATC loss in the electricity sector of the United States, which was only 6.6% out of 4,404 billion kWh electricity supplied during the year 2018.[219] The Indian government set a target of reducing losses to 17.1% by 2017 and to 14.1% by 2022. A high proportion of non-technical losses are caused by illegal tapping of lines, faulty electric meters and fictitious power generation that underestimates actual consumption and also contributes to reduced payment collection. A case study in Kerala estimated that replacing faulty meters could reduce distribution losses from 34% to 29%.[57]

Foreign electricity trade

India's National Grid is synchronously interconnected to Bhutan, and asynchronously linked with Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal.[220] An undersea interconnector to Sri Lanka (India–Sri Lanka HVDC Interconnection) have been proposed.[221]

India has been exporting electricity to Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal and importing excess electricity from Bhutan.[222][223] In 2015, Nepal imported 224.21 MW of electric power from India, and Bangladesh imported 500MW.[224][225] In 2018 Bangladesh proposed importing 10,000 MW power from India.[226]

To encourage the carbon neutral solar power generation, plans are made to transform the Indian national grid into a transnational grid expanding up to Vietnam towards east and Iraq towards west spanning nearly 7,000 km wide.[227] Being at the central location of the widened grid, India will be able to import the excess solar power available outside its territory at cheaper prices to meet the morning and evening peak load power demands without much costly energy storage.[228]

Regulation and administration

The Ministry of Power is India's top union government body regulating the electrical energy sector in India. The ministry was created on 2 July 1992. It is responsible for planning, policy formulation, processing of projects for investment decisions, monitoring project implementation, training and manpower development, and the administration and enactment of legislation in regard to power generation, transmission and distribution.[229] It is also responsible for the administration of India's Electricity Act (2003), the Energy Conservation Act (2001) and has the responsibility of undertaking amendments to these Acts when necessary to meet the union government's policy objectives.

Electricity is a concurrent list subject at Entry 38 in List III of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India. In India's federal governance structure, this means that both the union government and India's state governments are involved in establishing policies and laws for the electricity sector. This requires the union government and individual state governments to enter into memoranda of understanding to help expedite projects in the individual states.[230] To disseminate information to the public on power purchases by the distribution companies (discoms), the government of India recently started posting data on its website on a daily basis.[231]

Trading

Bulk power purchasers can buy electricity on a daily basis for short, medium, and long-term durations from a reverse e-auction facility.[232] The electricity prices transacted by the reverse e-auction facility are far less than the prices agreed under bilateral agreements.[233] The commodity derivative exchange Multi Commodity Exchange has sought permission to offer electricity futures markets in India.[234] The union government of India is also planning reverse procurement process in which generators and discoms with surplus power can seek e-bids for power supply for up to a one-year period, to put an end to bilateral contracts and determine the market-based price for electricity.[235]

Energy saving certificates (PAT), various renewable purchase obligations (RPO), and renewable energy certificates (REC) are also traded on the power exchanges regularly.[236][237]

Government-owned power companies

India's Ministry of Power administers central government-owned companies involved in the generation of electricity in India. These include the National Thermal Power Corporation, Neyveli Lignite Corporation,the SJVN, the Damodar Valley Corporation, the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation and the Nuclear Power Corporation of India. The Power Grid Corporation of India is also administered by the Ministry; it is responsible for the inter-state transmission of electricity and the development of the national grid.

The Ministry works with state governments on matters related to state government-owned corporations in India's electricity sector. Examples of state corporations include the Telangana Power Generation Corporation, the Andhra Pradesh Power Generation Corporation Limited, the Assam Power Generation Corporation Limited, the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board, the Maharashtra State Electricity Board, the Kerala State Electricity Board, the West Bengal State Electricity Distribution Company and Gujarat Urja Vikas Nigam Limited.

Funding of power infrastructure

 
Borrowings by state owned discoms & commercial losses of discoms

India's Ministry of Power administers the Rural Electrification Corporation Limited and the Power Finance Corporation Limited. These central-government-owned public sector enterprises provide loans and guarantees for public and private electricity sector infrastructure projects in India. Excessive plant construction loans at 75% of overestimated costs on overrated plant capacities have led to stranded assets of US$40 to 60 billion.[238][239] The central and state-owned power generators escaped this crisis as they had entered PPAs with state-owned monopolistic discoms on a cost-plus basis at higher than prevailing market power tariffs, without undergoing competitive bidding process. Many direct and indirect subsidies are given to various sectors.[240]

Budgetary support

After the enactment of Electricity Act 2003 budgetary support to the power sector is negligible.[241] Many State Electricity Boards were separated into their component parts after the act came into force, creating separate entities for generating, transmitting and distributing power.[242]

Human resource development

 
1.6 million volt impulse generator at the High Voltage Lab of Jabalpur Engineering College

The rapid growth of the electricity sector in India has generated high demand for trained personnel. India is making efforts to expand energy education and to enable existing educational institutions to introduce courses related to energy capacity addition, production, operations and maintenance. This initiative includes conventional and renewable energy.

The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy announced that State Renewable Energy Agencies are being supported to organize short-term training programs for installation, operation and maintenance, and repair of renewable energy systems in locations where intensive renewable energy programs are being implemented. Renewable Energy Chairs have been established at the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee and the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur.[190] The Central Training Institute Jabalpur is a training institute for power distribution engineering and management.[citation needed] The NTPC School of Business Noida has initiated an energy-centered two-year post-graduate diploma in the management program and a one-year post-graduate diploma in management (executive) program, to cater to the growing need for management professionals in this area.[citation needed] Education and availability of skilled workers are expected to be a key challenge in India's effort to expand its electricity sector.

Problems with India's power sector

India's electricity sector faces many issues, including:

  1. Inadequate last mile connectivity. The country already has adequate generation and transmission capacity to meet the full consumer demand, both temporally and spatially.[3] However, due to the lack of last-mile link-up between all electricity consumers and a reliable power supply (to exceed 99%), many consumers depend on diesel generators.[49] Nearly 80 billion kWh of electricity is generated annually in India by diesel generator sets that consume nearly 15 million tons of diesel oil. Over 10 million households use battery storage UPS as back-ups in case of load shedding.[243] India imports nearly US$2 billion worth of battery storage UPS every year.[244] As overhead lines cause distribution problems during rain and wind storms, there is a plan to lay buried cables from low voltage substations to supply cheaper emergency power in cities and towns and thus reduce diesel oil consumption by diesel generator sets and the installation of UPS systems.[citation needed]
  2. Demand build up measures. Electricity-intensive industries consume the cheaper electricity (average price Rs 2.5 per kWhr) available from the grid instead of running their own coal/gas/oil fired captive power plants.[245][246] The captive power generation capacity by such plants is nearly 53,000 MW, and they are mainly established in steel, fertilizer, aluminium, cement, etc. industries.[247][3] These plants can draw cheaper electricity from the grid on short term open access (STOA) basis, avoiding their own higher cost of electricity generation and diverting power from other consumers.[248][249] Some of these idling captive power plants can be used for ancillary services or grid reserve service and earn extra revenue.[250][251]
  3. Unequal electricity distribution. Almost all households have access to electricity.[1] However, most households find the electricity supply intermittent and unreliable.[252] At the same time, many power stations are idling for lack of electricity demand and the idling generation capacity is sufficient to supply the needs of households lacking electricity three times over.
  4. Erratic power pricing. In general, industrial and commercial consumers subsidize domestic and agricultural consumers.[253][254] Government giveaways such as free electricity for farmers, created partly to curry political favor, have depleted the cash reserves of state-run electricity-distribution system and led to debts of 2.5 trillion (US$31 billion).[255] This has financially crippled the distribution network, and its ability to pay to purchase power in the absence of subsidies from state governments.[256] This situation has been worsened by state government departments that do not pay their electricity bills.
  5. Over-rated capacity. Many coal-fired plants are overrated above the actual maximum continuous rating (MCR) capacity.[257] to allow the plant cost to be inflated.[258] These plants operate 15 to 10% below their declared capacity on a daily basis and rarely operate at declared capacity, undermining grid stability.
  6. Lack of timely information on load and demand. Intraday graphs at 15-minute or more frequent intervals are required to understand the shortcomings of the power grid with respect to grid frequency, including comprehensive data collected from SCADA for all grid-connected generating stations (≥ 100 KW) and load data from all substations.[259]
  7. Lack of adequate coal supply: Despite abundant reserves of coal, power plants are frequently under-supplied. India's monopoly coal producer, state-controlled Coal India, is constrained by primitive mining techniques and is rife with theft and corruption.[citation needed] Poor coal transport infrastructure has worsened these problems. Most of India's coal lies under protected forests or designated tribal lands and efforts to mine additional deposits have been resisted.
  8. Poor gas pipeline connectivity and infrastructure. India has abundant coal bed methane and natural gas potential. However a giant new offshore natural gas field has delivered far less gas than claimed, causing a shortage of natural gas.
  9. Transmission, distribution and consumer-level losses. Losses exceed 30%, including the auxiliary power consumption of thermal power stations and fictitious electricity generation by wind generators, solar power plants & independent power producers (IPPs), etc.
  10. Resistance to energy efficiency in the residential building sector. Continuous urbanization and the growth of population result in increased power consumption in buildings. The belief still predominates among stakeholders that energy-efficient buildings are more expensive than conventional buildings, adversely affecting the "greening" of the building sector.[260]
  11. Resistance to hydroelectric power projects. Hydroelectric power projects in India's mountainous north and northeast regions have been slowed down by ecological, environmental and rehabilitation controversies, coupled with public interest litigation.
  12. Resistance to nuclear power generation. Political activism since the Fukushima disaster has reduced progress in this sector. The track record of executing nuclear power plants is also very poor in India.[261][134]
  13. Theft of power. The financial loss due to theft of electricity is estimated at $16 billion yearly.[citation needed]

Key implementation challenges for India's electricity sector include efficient performance of new project management and execution, ensuring availability and appropriate quality of fuel, developing the large coal and natural gas resources available in India, land acquisition, obtaining environmental clearances at state and central government level, and training skilled manpower.[262]

Electricity as a substitute to imported LPG and kerosene

India's net import of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is 6.093 million tons and the domestic consumption is 13.568 million tons with ₹ 41,546 crores subsidy to domestic consumers in 2012–13.[263] The LPG import content is nearly 40% of total consumption in India.[264] The affordable electricity retail tariff (860 Kcal/Kwh at 74% heating efficiency) to replace LPG (net calorific value 11,000 Kcal/Kg at 40% heating efficiency) in domestic cooking is up to 10.2 ₹/Kwh, when the retail price of LPG cylinder is ₹1000 (without subsidy) with 14.2 kg LPG content.[265] Replacing LPG consumption with electricity would reduce imports substantially.[266]

The domestic consumption of kerosene is 7.349 million tons with ₹ 30,151 crores subsidy to the domestic consumers in 2012–13. The subsidized retail price of kerosene is 13.69 ₹/liter whereas the export/import price is 48.00 ₹/liter. The affordable electricity retail tariff (860 Kcal/Kwh at 74% heating efficiency) to replace kerosene (net calorific value 8240 Kcal/liter at 40% heating efficiency) in domestic cooking is up to 9.27 ₹/kWh when the kerosene retail price is 48 ₹/liter.

In 2014–15, the plant load factor (PLF) of coal-fired thermal power stations was only 64.46%. These stations can run above 85% PLF if there is adequate electricity demand.[267] The additional electricity generation at 85% PLF is nearly 240 billion kWh, enough to replace all the LPG and kerosene consumption in domestic sector.[268] The incremental cost of generating additional electricity is only the coal fuel cost, less than 3 ₹/Kwh. Enhancing the PLF of coal-fired stations and encouraging domestic electricity consumers to substitute electricity in place of LPG and kerosene in household cooking would reduce government subsidies. It has been proposed that domestic consumers who are willing to surrender subsidized LPG/kerosene permits should be given a free electricity connection and a subsidized electricity tariff.[269] Substantial scope is also present in micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSME) to switch over to electricity from fossil fuels to reduce cost of production provided uninterrupted power supply is ensured.[270]

Since 2017, IPPs have offered to sell solar and wind power below 3.00 ₹/Kwh to feed into the high voltage grid. After considering distribution costs and losses, solar power appears to be a viable economic option for replacing the LPG and kerosene used in the domestic sector.

Electric vehicles

The retail prices of petrol and diesel are high enough in India to make electricity driven vehicles relatively economical.[271] The retail price of diesel was 101.00 ₹/litre in 2021–22, and the retail price of petrol was 110.00 ₹/litre. The affordable retail electricity price to replace diesel would be up to 19 ₹/Kwh (860 Kcal/Kwh at 75% input electricity to shaft power efficiency versus diesel's net calorific value of 8572 Kcal/liter at 40% fuel energy to crankshaft power efficiency), and the comparable number to replace petrol would be up to 28 ₹/Kwh (860 Kcal/Kwh at 75% input electricity to shaft power efficiency versus petrol's net calorific value at 7693 Kcal/litre at 33% fuel energy to crankshaft power efficiency). In 2012–13, India consumed 15.744 million tons of petrol and 69.179 million tons of diesel, both mainly produced from imported crude oil.[263]

Electricity driven vehicles are expected to become popular in India when energy storage/battery technology offers improved range, longer life and lower maintenance.[272][273] Vehicle to grid options are also attractive, potentially allowing electric vehicles to help to mitigate peak loads in the electricity grid. The potential for continuous charging of electric vehicles through wireless electricity transmission technology is being explored by Indian companies and others.[274][275][276]

Energy reserves

India has abundant solar, wind, hydro (including pumped storage) and biomass power potential. In addition, as of January 2011 India had approximately 38 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of proven natural gas reserves, the world's 26th largest reserve.[277] The United States Energy Information Administration estimates that India produced approximately 1.8 Tcf of natural gas in 2010 while consuming roughly 2.3 Tcf of natural gas. India already produces coalbed methane.

See also

Notes

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External links

  • Electricity grid maps of the southern region 31 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • India's Energy Policy and Electricity Production
  • [1] 6 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine

electricity, sector, india, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2021 This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message India is the third largest producer of electricity in the world 6 During the fiscal year FY 2019 20 the total electricity generation in the country was 1 598 TWh of which 1 383 5 TWh generated by utilities 7 8 The gross electricity consumption per capita in FY2019 was 1 208 kWh 7 Electricity sector of IndiaTransmission towers at a Chennai lakeDataElectricity coverage99 94 31 March 2019 1 Installed capacity409 161 MW 2 Production FY2020 1 383 TWh 3 GHG emissions from electricity generation 2018 2 309 98 Mt of CO2 4 Average electricity use FY2020 1 208 kWh per capita 3 Transmission amp Distribution losses FY2019 20 66 3 Consumption by sector of total Residential24 01 3 FY2020 Industrial42 69 3 FY2020 Agriculture17 67 3 FY2020 Commercial8 04 3 FY2020 Traction1 52 3 FY2020 Tariffs and financingAverage residential tariff US kW h Dec 2020 5 75 7 2 US 5 Average commercial tariff US kW h Dec 2020 8 64 11 US 5 ServicesShare of private sector in generation33 46 FY2020 3 InstitutionsResponsibility for policy settingMinistry of PowerResponsibility for renewable energyMinistry of New and Renewable EnergyResponsibility for the environmentMinistry of Environment Forest and Climate ChangeElectricity sector lawElectricity Act 2003In FY2015 electric energy consumption in agriculture was recorded as being the highest 17 89 worldwide 3 The per capita electricity consumption is low compared to most other countries despite India having a low electricity tariff 9 The national electric grid in India has an installed capacity of 409 1 GW as of 30 November 2022 2 Renewable power plants which also include large hydroelectric power plants constitute 40 7 of the total installed capacity India has a surplus power generation capacity but lacks adequate fuel supply and power distribution infrastructure The average capacity factor of thermal power plants is below 60 against the norm of 85 10 India s electricity sector is dominated by fossil fuels in particular coal which produced about three quarters of the country s electricity 11 12 The government is making efforts to increase investment in renewable energy The government s draft National Electricity Plan of 2022 states that the country does not need anymore fossil fuel power plants in the utility sector until 2027 besides those currently under construction 13 14 It is expected that non fossil fuel generation contribution is likely to be around 44 7 of the total gross electricity generation by 2029 30 15 Contents 1 History 2 Installed capacity 2 1 Utility power 2 2 Captive power 2 3 Installed capacity by state or territory 3 Demand 3 1 Demand trend 3 2 Demand drivers 3 3 Rural and Urban electrification 3 4 Per Capita consumption 4 Electricity generation 5 Thermal power 5 1 Pollution from coal based power plants 5 2 Retirement of old thermal power plants 5 3 Integration of renewable power 5 4 Natural gas supply constraints 5 5 Nuclear power 6 Renewable energy 6 1 Hydro power 6 2 Solar power 6 3 Wind power 6 4 Biomass power 6 5 Geothermal energy 6 6 Tidal power 7 Electricity transmission and distribution 8 Foreign electricity trade 9 Regulation and administration 9 1 Trading 9 2 Government owned power companies 9 3 Funding of power infrastructure 9 4 Budgetary support 9 5 Human resource development 10 Problems with India s power sector 11 Electricity as a substitute to imported LPG and kerosene 12 Electric vehicles 13 Energy reserves 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 External linksHistory Edit India electricity production by source The first demonstration of electric light in Calcutta now Kolkata was conducted on 24 July 1879 by P W Fleury amp Co On 7 January 1897 Kilburn amp Co secured the Calcutta electric lighting license as agents of the Indian Electric Co which was registered in London on 15 January 1897 A month later the company was renamed the Calcutta Electric Supply Corporation The control of the company was transferred from London to Calcutta only in 1970 The introduction of electricity in Calcutta was a success and power was next introduced in Bombay now Mumbai 16 The first electric lighting demonstration in Mumbai was in 1882 at Crawford Market and the Bombay Electric Supply amp Tramways Company BEST set up a generating station in 1905 to provide electricity for the tramway 17 The first hydroelectric installation in India was installed near a tea estate at Sidrapong for the Darjeeling Municipality in 1897 18 The first electric street light in Asia was lit on 5 August 1905 in Bangalore 19 The first electric train in the country ran on the Harbour Line between Bombay s Victoria Terminus and Kurla on 3 February 1925 20 The first high voltage laboratory of India was established at the Government Engineering College Jabalpur in 1947 21 On 18 August 2015 Cochin International Airport became the world s first fully solar powered airport with the inauguration of a dedicated solar plant 22 23 India began using grid management on a regional basis in the 1960s Individual State grids were interconnected to form 5 regional grids covering mainland India the Northern Eastern Western North Eastern and Southern Grids These regional links were established to enable transmission of surplus electricity between states in each region In the 1990s the Indian government began planning for a national grid Regional grids were initially interconnected by asynchronous high voltage direct current HVDC back to back links facilitating the limited exchange of regulated power The links were subsequently upgraded to high capacity synchronous links 24 The first interconnection of regional grids was established in October 1991 when the North Eastern and Eastern grids were interconnected The Western Grid was interconnected with these grids in March 2003 The Northern grid was also interconnected in August 2006 forming a Central Grid that was synchronously connected and operating at one frequency 24 The sole remaining regional grid the Southern Grid was synchronously interconnected to the Central Grid on 31 December 2013 with the commissioning of the 765 kV Raichur Solapur transmission line establishing the National Grid 24 25 By the end of the calendar year 2015 despite poor hydroelectricity generation India had become a power surplus nation with huge power generation capacity idling for want of demand 26 27 28 The calendar year 2016 started with steep falls in the international price of energy commodities such as coal diesel oil naphtha bunker fuel and liquefied natural gas LNG which are used in electricity generation in India 29 30 31 32 33 As a result of the global glut in petroleum products these fuels became cheap enough to compete with pit head coal based power generators 34 Coal prices have also fallen 35 Low demand for coal has led to coal stocks building up at power stations as well as coal mines 36 New installations of renewable energy in India surpassed installations of fossil fuel for the first time in 2016 17 37 On 29 March 2017 the Central Electricity Authority CEA stated that for the first time India has become a net exporter of electricity India exported 5 798 GWh to neighboring countries against a total import of 5 585 GWh The Government of India launched a program called Power for All in 2016 38 The program was accomplished by December 2018 in providing the necessary infrastructure to ensure uninterrupted electricity supply to all households industries and commercial establishments 39 Funding was made through a collaboration between the Government of India and its constituent states 40 41 Installed capacity EditInstalled capacity by source in utility sector as on 13 January 2023 42 Coal 203 775 MW 49 7 Lignite 6 620 MW 1 6 Gas 24 824 MW 6 0 Diesel 589 MW 0 1 Hydro 46 850 MW 11 4 Wind Solar amp Other RE 120 900 MW 29 5 Nuclear 6 780 MW 1 7 The total installed power generation capacity is the sum of utility capacity captive power capacity and other non utilities Utility power Edit Growth of Installed Capacity in India 3 Installed Capacityas on Thermal MW Nuclear MW Renewable MW Total MW Growth on yearly basis Coal Gas Diesel Sub TotalThermal Hydro OtherRenewable Sub TotalRenewable31 December 1947 756 98 854 508 508 1 362 31 December 1950 1 004 149 1 153 560 560 1 713 8 59 31 March 1956 1 597 228 1 825 1 061 1 061 2 886 13 04 31 March 1961 2 436 300 2 736 1 917 1 917 4 653 12 25 31 March 1966 4 417 137 352 4 903 4 124 4 124 9 027 18 80 31 March 1974 8 652 165 241 9 058 640 6 966 6 966 16 664 10 58 31 March 1979 14 875 168 164 15 207 640 10 833 10 833 26 680 12 02 31 March 1985 26 311 542 177 27 030 1 095 14 460 14 460 42 585 9 94 31 March 1990 41 236 2 343 165 43 764 1 565 18 307 18 307 63 636 9 89 31 March 1997 54 154 6 562 294 61 010 2 225 21 658 902 22 560 85 795 4 94 31 March 2002 62 131 11 163 1 135 74 429 2 720 26 269 1 628 27 897 105 046 4 49 31 March 2007 71 121 13 692 1 202 86 015 3 900 34 654 7 760 42 414 132 329 5 19 31 March 2012 112 022 18 381 1 200 131 603 4 780 38 990 24 503 63 493 199 877 9 00 31 March 2014 145 273 21 782 1 200 168 255 4 780 40 532 31 692 72 224 245 259 10 77 31 March 2017 192 163 25 329 838 218 330 6 780 44 478 57 260 101 138 326 841 10 31 31 March 2018 197 171 24 897 838 222 906 6 780 45 293 69 022 114 315 344 002 5 25 31 March 2019 200 704 24 937 637 226 279 6 780 45 399 77 641 123 040 356 100 3 52 31 March 2020 43 205 135 24 955 510 230 600 6 780 45 699 87 028 132 427 370 106 3 93 31 March 2021 44 209 294 24 924 510 234 728 6 780 46 209 94 433 140 642 382 151 3 25 31 March 2022 2 210 700 24 899 510 236 109 6 780 46 723 109 885 156 607 399 497 4 53 Nearly 32 285 MW coal and gas based thermal power projects are under construction as on 1 April 2021 45 The total installed utility power generation capacity as on 30 September 2022 by type is given below 2 Breakdown of Installed Generation Capacity as on 30 09 2022 Source Installed Capacity MW of Share in TotalFossil Fuels Total 236 086 57 9 Coal 204 079 50 Lignite 6 620 1 6 Gas 24 824 6 1 Diesel 562 0 1 Non Fossil Fuels Total 171 710 42 1 Hydro 46 850 11 5 Wind 41 666 10 2 Solar 60 814 14 9 Bio Mass Power Cogen 10 206 2 5 Waste to Energy 495 0 1 Small Hydro 4 899 1 2 Nuclear 6 780 1 7 Total Installed Capacity 407 797 100 Hydroelectric power plants with 25 MW generation capacity are included in Renewable category classified as SHP Small Hydro Project Captive power Edit The installed captive power generation capacity above 1 MW capacity associated with industry owned plants is 70 000 MW as of 31 March 2021 46 In fiscal year 2020 21 captive power generation was 200 000 GWh 46 47 Diesel power generation sets of 75 000 MW capacity excluding sets of size above 1 MW and below 100 kVA are also installed in the country 48 49 In addition there are a large number of diesel generators of capacity less than 100 kVA to cater to emergency power needs during power outages in all sectors 50 Captive Power Sector Number Source Captive Power Capacity MW Share Electricity generated GWh Share1 Coal 52 057 64 05 169 138 86 78 2 Hydroelectricity 132 0 14 351 0 09 3 Renewable energy source 4 520 4 08 7 268 1 79 4 Natural Gas 7 389 11 46 21 241 9 06 5 Oil 12 902 20 27 2 002 2 24 Total 70 000 00 100 00 200 000 100 00 Installed capacity by state or territory Edit Main article States of India by installed power capacity This is a list of states and territories of India by installed power generation capacity State wise all India installed power generation capacity as of 30 Nov 2021 51 INCLUDING ALLOCATED SHARES IN JOINT amp CENTRAL SECTOR UTILITIES State Union Territory Thermal in MW Nuclear in MW Renewable in MW Total in MW of National Total RenewableCoal Lignite Gas Diesel Sub TotalThermal Hydel OtherRenewable Sub TotalRenewableWestern Region 73716 27 1400 10806 49 85922 76 1840 7562 50 32224 30 39786 80 127549 56 32 53 31 19 Maharashtra 25254 18 3512 73 28766 91 690 3331 84 10566 19 13898 03 43354 94 11 05 32 06 Gujarat 16302 27 1400 6586 82 24289 09 559 772 15319 23 16 091 23 40939 32 10 44 39 31 Madhya Pradesh 16087 48 352 16419 48 273 3223 66 5421 24 8644 90 25337 38 6 46 34 12 Chhattisgarh 12221 89 12221 89 48 233 852 58 1085 58 13355 47 3 40 8 13 Goa 492 27 67 67 559 94 26 2 18 88 20 88 606 82 0 15 3 44 Dadra amp Nagar Haveli 422 44 66 34 488 78 9 5 46 5 46 503 24 0 12 1 08 Daman amp Diu 164 74 43 34 208 08 7 40 72 40 72 255 80 0 06 15 92 Central Unallocated 2771 197 59 2968 59 228 3196 59 0 81 0 00 Southern Region 44904 52 3640 6491 80 433 66 55469 99 3320 11819 83 45947 33 57767 16 116557 15 29 73 49 56 Tamil Nadu 11832 99 1767 30 1027 18 211 70 14839 17 1448 2 178 15869 19 18047 39 34334 56 8 75 52 56 Karnataka 9846 30 471 90 25 20 10343 40 698 3631 60 15763 29 19394 89 30436 29 7 76 63 72 Andhra Pradesh 10430 71 180 23 4066 72 36 80 14714 46 127 27 1673 60 9190 51 10864 11 25705 84 6 55 42 26 Telangana 9168 80 210 57 831 82 10211 19 148 73 2479 93 4479 38 6959 31 17319 23 4 41 40 18 Kerala 2058 92 314 20 533 58 159 96 3066 66 362 1856 50 632 91 2489 41 5918 07 1 50 42 06 Puducherry 140 80 111 80 32 50 285 10 86 12 05 12 05 383 15 0 09 3 14 NLC 166 166 166 0 04 0 00 Central Unallocated 1426 418 1844 450 2294 0 58 0 00 Northern Region 55407 31 1580 5781 26 62768 57 1620 20433 77 23676 31 44110 108498 65 27 67 40 65 Rajasthan 11599 59 1580 824 90 14004 49 556 74 1939 19 13988 34 15927 53 30488 76 7 77 52 24 Uttar Pradesh 19753 84 549 49 20303 33 289 48 3424 03 4352 34 7776 37 28369 18 7 23 27 41 Punjab 8315 50 414 01 8729 51 196 81 3809 12 1763 44 5572 56 14498 89 3 69 38 43 Haryana 8636 58 685 61 9322 19 100 94 2318 52 1086 88 3405 40 12828 52 3 27 26 55 Delhi 4405 51 2115 41 6520 93 102 83 723 09 263 12 986 21 7609 97 1 94 12 96 Himachal Pradesh 151 69 62 01 213 70 28 95 3068 88 1023 19 4092 07 4334 72 1 10 94 40 Uttarakhand 491 60 519 66 1011 26 31 24 1975 89 906 56 2882 45 3924 95 1 00 73 44 Jammu and Kashmir amp Ladakh 577 14 304 07 881 22 67 98 2321 88 238 99 2560 87 3510 07 0 89 72 96 Chandigarh 44 83 15 03 59 86 8 01 101 71 53 45 155 16 223 02 0 05 69 57 Central Unallocated 1431 03 291 05 1722 08 237 03 751 45 751 45 2710 57 0 69 27 72 Eastern Region 27866 38 100 27966 38 4752 12 1721 34 6473 46 34439 84 8 78 18 80 West Bengal 9097 34 100 9197 34 1396 584 90 1980 90 11178 24 2 85 17 72 Odisha 5027 21 5027 21 2150 92 596 34 2747 26 7774 47 1 98 35 34 Bihar 6528 21 6528 21 110 386 93 496 93 7025 14 1 79 7 07 DVC 3247 02 3247 02 186 20 186 20 3433 21 0 87 5 42 Jharkhand 2426 50 2426 50 191 96 42 287 42 2713 92 0 69 10 59 Sikkim 50 27 50 27 633 56 75 689 75 740 02 0 18 93 21 Central Unallocated 1489 83 1489 83 85 01 85 01 1574 84 0 40 5 40 North Eastern Region 770 02 1719 96 36 2525 98 1944 424 02 2368 02 4893 99 1 24 48 39 Assam 402 52 764 92 1167 44 522 08 104 68 626 76 1794 20 0 45 34 93 Arunachal Pradesh 37 05 46 82 83 87 544 55 142 34 686 89 770 76 0 19 89 12 Tripura 56 10 573 95 630 05 68 49 30 88 99 37 729 42 0 18 13 62 Meghalaya 51 60 109 69 161 29 409 27 50 43 459 70 620 99 0 15 74 03 Manipur 47 10 71 57 36 154 67 95 34 17 63 112 97 267 64 0 06 42 21 Mizoram 31 05 40 46 71 51 97 94 44 35 142 29 213 80 0 05 66 55 Nagaland 32 10 48 93 81 03 66 33 33 71 100 04 181 07 0 04 55 25 Central Unallocated 112 50 63 62 176 12 140 140 316 12 0 08 44 29 Islands 40 5 40 5 38 01 38 01 78 06 0 01 48 69 Andaman and Nicobar Islands 40 5 40 5 34 74 34 74 74 79 0 01 46 45 Lakshadweep 3 27 3 27 3 27 0 00 100 00 Total 202664 50 6620 24899 51 509 71 234693 72 6780 46512 22 104031 31 150543 53 392017 24 100 00 38 40 Other Renewable Energy sources include SHP Small Hydro Power hydel plants 25 MW Biomass Power Urban amp Industrial waste Solar and Wind EnergyDemand Edit Electricity Generation from 1985 to 2012 Electricity generation in India from 2009 to 2019 data source powermin nic in Demand trend Edit During the fiscal year 2019 20 the utility energy availability was 1 284 44 billion KWh a shortfall relative to requirements by 6 5 billion KWh 0 5 Peak load met was 182 533 MW 1 229 MW 0 6 below requirements In the 2020 Load Generation Balance report India s Central Electricity Authority anticipated energy surplus and peak surplus to be 2 7 and 9 1 respectively for the 2020 21 fiscal year 52 Power would be made available to few states expected to face shortages from states with a surplus through regional transmission links 53 From the calendar year 2015 onwards power generation in India has been less of a problem than power distribution 54 27 28 55 56 Demand drivers Edit Further information Energy poverty and cooking Nearly 0 07 of Indian households 0 2 million have no access to electricity 1 The International Energy Agency estimates India will add between 600 GW to 1 200 GW of additional new power generation capacity before 2050 57 This added new capacity is similar in scale to the 740 GW total power generation capacity of the European Union EU 27 in 2005 The technologies and fuel sources India adopts as it adds this electricity generation capacity may have a significant impact on global resource usage and environmental issues 58 The demand for electricity for cooling HVAC is projected to grow rapidly 59 According to the analysis presented in the India Cooling Action Plan ICAP released by the Ministry of Environment Forests and Climate Change only 8 percent of Indian households own air conditioning units The cooling demand across India is projected to rise at a rate of 15 20 percent annually and aggregated cooling demand will grow to around eight times by 2037 38 as compared to the 2017 18 baseline In India 45 percent of the country s peak electricity demand in 2050 is expected to come from space cooling alone 60 About 136 million Indians 11 use traditional fuels firewood agricultural waste and dry animal dung fuel for cooking and general heating needs 61 These traditional fuels are burnt in cook stoves sometimes known as chulah or chulha 62 Traditional fuel is an inefficient source of energy and its burning releases high levels of smoke PM10 particulate matter NOx SOx PAHs polyaromatics formaldehyde carbon monoxide and other air pollutants affecting outdoor air quality haze and smog chronic health problems damage to forests ecosystems and global climate 63 64 65 The World Health Organization estimates that 300 000 to 400 000 people in India die of indoor air pollution and carbon monoxide poisoning every year because of biomass burning and use of chulahs 66 Burning traditional fuel in conventional cook stoves is estimated to release 5 15x more pollutants than industrial combustion of coal and is unlikely to be replaced until electricity or clean burning fuel and combustion technologies become reliably available and widely adopted in rural and urban India The growth of the electricity sector in India may help find a sustainable alternative to traditional fuel burning In addition to air pollution problems a 2007 study finds that discharge of untreated sewage is the single most important cause for pollution of surface and groundwater in India The majority of government owned sewage treatment plants remain closed most of the time in part because of the lack of a reliable electricity supply to operate the plants Uncollected waste accumulates in urban areas causing unhygienic conditions and release heavy metals and pollutants that leaches to surface and groundwater 67 68 A reliable supply of electricity is required to address India s water pollution and associated environmental issues Other drivers for India s electricity sector are its rapidly growing economy rising exports improving infrastructure and increasing household incomes Adding to it the recent coal crisis has raised an alarm as over 60 per cent of the electricity produced in the country is derived from thermal power plants and thus depend on coal 69 Growth of Electricity Consumption in India 7 3 Year Population millions 70 Consumption GWh of Total Per Capita Consumption in kWh Domestic Commercial Industrial Traction Agriculture Misc1947 330 4 182 10 11 4 26 70 78 6 62 2 99 5 24 16 31950 376 5 610 9 36 5 51 72 32 5 49 2 89 4 44 18 21956 417 10 150 9 20 5 38 74 03 3 99 3 11 4 29 30 91961 458 16 804 8 88 5 05 74 67 2 70 4 96 3 75 45 91966 508 30 455 7 73 5 42 74 19 3 47 6 21 2 97 73 91974 607 55 557 8 36 5 38 68 02 2 76 11 36 4 13 126 21979 681 84 005 9 02 5 15 64 81 2 60 14 32 4 10 171 61985 781 124 569 12 45 5 57 59 02 2 31 16 83 3 83 228 71990 870 195 098 15 16 4 89 51 45 2 09 22 58 3 83 329 21997 997 315 294 17 53 5 56 44 17 2 09 26 65 4 01 464 62002 1089 374 670 21 27 6 44 42 57 2 16 21 80 5 75 671 92007 1179 525 672 21 12 7 65 45 89 2 05 18 84 4 45 559 22012 1 220 785 194 22 00 8 00 45 00 2 00 18 00 5 00 883 62013 1 235 824 301 22 29 8 83 44 40 1 71 17 89 4 88 914 42014 1 251 881 562 22 95 8 80 43 17 1 75 18 19 5 14 9572015 1 267 938 823 23 53 8 77 42 10 1 79 18 45 5 37 10102016 1 283 1 001 191 23 86 8 59 42 30 1 66 17 30 6 29 10752017 1 325 1 066 268 24 32 9 22 40 01 1 61 18 33 6 50 11222018 1 338 1 130 244 24 20 8 51 41 48 1 27 18 08 6 47 11492019 1 352 1 196 309 24 76 8 24 41 16 1 52 17 69 6 63 11812020 1 365 1 291 494 24 01 8 04 42 69 1 52 17 67 6 07 12082021 46 1 380 1 227 000 25 67 8 31 41 09 1 51 17 52 5 89 1139 Data from fiscal year ending on 31 March of each year Refers to fiscal year ending on 31 December Note Per Capita Consumption gross electricity generation by all sources plus net import mid year population Consumption is gross electricity generation by all sources plus net import after subtracting transmission loses and auxiliary consumption in electricity generation The per capita annual domestic electricity consumption in India during the year 2009 was 96 kWh in rural areas and 288 kWh in urban areas for those with access to electricity Globally the per capita annual average is 2 600 kWh and in the European Union it is 6 200 kWh 71 Rural and Urban electrification Edit See also Saubhagya scheme and Rural Electrification Corporation Limited India s Ministry of Power launched Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Gram Jyoti Yojana DDUGJY as one of its flagship programmes in July 2015 with the objective of providing round the clock power to rural areas The programe focused on reforms in the rural power sector by separating feeder lines for rural households from those for agricultural applications and strengthening transmission and distribution infrastructure A previous scheme for rural electrification Rajiv Gandhi Grameen Vidyutikaran Yojana RGGVY was subsumed into the new scheme 72 As of 28 April 2018 12 days ahead of the target date all Indian villages a total of 597 464 census villages were electrified 73 India has also achieved close to 100 electrification of all rural and urban households As of 4 January 2019 211 88 million rural households were provided with electricity close to 100 of the 212 65 million total rural households 1 As of 4 January 2019 42 937 million urban households are provided with electricity close to 100 of the 42 941 million total urban households Per Capita consumption Edit Electricity generation utility sector by source in India in FY 2021 2022 Coal 1 078 444 GWh 72 7 Large Hydro 151 695 GWh 10 2 Small Hydro 10 463 GWh 0 7 Wind Power 68 640 GWh 4 6 Solar Power 73 483 GWh 5 0 Biomass amp other RE 18 324 GWh 1 2 Nuclear 47 019 GWh 3 2 Gas 36 143 GWh 2 4 Diesel 115 GWh 0 0 Electricity consumption per capita in 2020 2021 74 75 State Union territory Per capita consumption kWh Total sales TWh Domestic sales TWh Industrial HV sales TWh Industrial MV amp LV sales TWh Agriculture sales TWh Commercial sales TWh Dadra and Nagar Haveli 12 250 5 28 0 14 4 89 0 19 0 04 0 32Daman and Diu 5 914 2 13Goa 3 736 3 70Gujarat 2 239 92 27 16 51 41 12 14 60 12 66 4 31Chhattisgarh 2 211 23 36 6 44 7 51 0 60 5 90 1 41Maharashtra 1 588 126 42 30 19 34 15 9 88 33 91 9 54Madhya Pradesh 1 232 60 95 16 79 9 24 1 29 25 64 3 37Western Region 1 736 314 13 71 49 100 49 26 87 78 16 19 15Puducherry 2 138 2 60Tamil Nadu 1 714 94 59 32 72 23 51 9 33 13 97 8 97Andhra Pradesh 76 1 567 51 75 17 47 14 26 2 28 9 36 3 05Telangana 2 126 57 89 12 80 11 24 1 22 22 26 4 84Karnataka 1 376 62 78 15 66 9 74 1 91 22 33 6 75Kerala 844 22 59 12 76 2 92 1 14 0 42 4 26Lakshadweep 819 0 53Southern Region 1 548 292 28 92 32 62 99 16 06 68 42 28 09Punjab 2 350 50 28 15 32 12 58 3 13 13 09 3 46Haryana 2 186 41 94 11 97 10 75 2 04 10 08 4 00Delhi 1 684 26 39 16 43 0 47 2 34 0 39 5 31Himachal Pradesh 1 742 8 63 2 35 4 68 0 08 0 07 0 51Uttarakhand 1 520 11 22 3 20 5 44 0 26 0 18 1 33Chandigarh 1 529 1 34Jammu and Kashmir 1 475 9 98 4 88 0 92 0 23 0 36 1 70Rajasthan 1 345 64 88 14 25 11 53 2 11 28 52 4 09Uttar Pradesh 663 93 60 43 95 10 25 3 98 18 93 6 28Northern Region 1 137 308 23 113 09 56 76 14 32 71 30 27 06Odisha 2 264 20 60 8 42 6 02 0 40 0 64 2 15Sikkim 1011 0 41Jharkhand 867 21 37 6 47 11 83 0 30 0 20 1 03West Bengal 733 48 39 17 53 15 58 2 14 1 33 5 45Andaman and Nicobar 878 0 24Bihar 329 24 10 15 04 2 76 0 80 1 14 2 39Eastern Region 807 115 15 47 74 36 45 3 68 3 33 11 12Arunachal Pradesh 645 0 40Meghalaya 751 1 32Mizoram 582 0 45Nagaland 433 0 68Tripura 435 0 98Assam 384 7 35 3 78 1 57 0 12 0 39 1 09Manipur 362 0 65North Eastern Region 426 11 86 6 15 2 35 0 23 0 09 1 52National 1 255 1042 66 330 81 259 06 62 16 221 30 86 95Notes Per capita consumption gross electricity generation net import mid year population Nearly a 24 difference between sales and gross generation due to auxiliary power consumption of thermal power plants and transmission and distribution T amp D losses etc Electricity generation EditIndia has recorded rapid growth in electricity generation since 1985 increasing from 179 TW hr in 1985 to 1 057 TW hr in 2012 77 The majority of the increase came from coal fired plants and non conventional renewable energy sources RES with the contribution from natural gas oil and hydro plants decreasing in 2012 2017 The gross utility electricity generation excluding imports from Bhutan was 1 384 billion kWh in 2019 20 representing 1 0 annual growth compared to 2018 2019 The contribution from renewable energy sources was nearly 20 of the total In 2019 20 all the incremental electricity generation is contributed by renewable energy sources as the power generation from fossil fuels decreased 78 During the year 2020 2021 the utility power generation has decreased by 0 8 11 3 billion kWh with a reduction in power generation from fossil fuels by 1 and power generation from non fossil sources is more or less same of the previous year In 2020 21 India exported more electricity than it imported from neighboring countries 79 Solar power generation in 2020 21 occupied third place after coal and hydropower generations surpassing wind gas and nuclear power generations Yearly gross electricity generation by source GWh Year Fossil Fuel Nuclear Hydro Subtotal RES 80 Utility and Captive PowerCoal Oil Gas Minihydro Solar Wind Biomass Other Subtotal Utility Captive see Table above Misc Total2011 12 612 497 2 649 93 281 32 286 130 511 871 224 na na na na na 51 226 922 451 134 387 na 1 056 8382012 13 691 341 2 449 66 664 32 866 113 720 907 040 na na na na na 57 449 964 489 144 009 na 1 108 4982013 14 746 087 1 868 44 522 34 228 134 847 961 552 na 3 350 na na na 59 615 1 021 167 156 643 na 1 177 8102014 15 835 838 1 407 41 075 36 102 129 244 1 043 666 8 060 4 600 28 214 14 944 414 61 780 1 105 446 166 426 na 1 271 8722015 16 81 896 260 406 47 122 37 413 121 377 1 102 578 8 355 7 450 28 604 16 681 269 65 781 1 168 359 183 611 na 1 351 9702016 17 82 944 861 275 49 094 37 916 122 313 1 154 523 7 673 12 086 46 011 14 159 213 81 869 1 236 392 197 000 na 1 433 3922017 18 83 986 591 386 50 208 38 346 126 123 1 201 653 5 056 25 871 52 666 15 252 358 101 839 1 303 493 183 000 na 1 486 4932018 19 3 1 021 997 129 49 886 37 706 135 040 1 244 758 8 703 39 268 62 036 16 325 425 126 757 1 371 517 175 000 na 1 546 5172019 20 7 994 197 199 48 443 46 472 155 769 1 245 080 9 366 50 103 64 639 13 843 366 138 337 84 1 383 417 239 567 na 1 622 9832020 21 46 981 239 129 51 027 42 949 150 305 1 225 649 10 258 60 402 60 150 14 816 1621 147 247 85 1 373 187 200 000 na 1 573 1872021 22 86 1 078 444 115 36 143 47 019 151 695 1 313 418 10 463 73 483 68 640 16 056 2 268 170 912 87 1 484 330 naNotes Coal includes lignite Misc includes contributions from emergency diesel generator sets roof top solar captive power generation from below 1 MW capacity plants etc Hydro includes pumped storage generation na data not available Thermal power Edit NTPC thermal power plant in Sipat Chhattisgarh A thermal power plant in Maharashtra Pollution from coal based power plants Edit in million tonnes In India the Commercial Energy makes 74 of total energy of which coal based energy production is around 72 75 as per 2020 data For utility power generation India consumed 622 22 million tons of coal during 2019 20 which is less by 1 compared to 628 94 million tons during 2018 19 However coal imports for utility power generation increased by 12 3 during year 2019 20 at 69 22 million tons from 61 66 million tons during 2018 19 88 A large part of the Indian coal reserve is similar to Gondwana coal it is of low calorific value and high ash content with poor fuel value On average Indian coal has a gross calorific value GCV of about 4500 Kcal kg whereas in Australia for example the GCV is about 6500 Kcal kg 89 The result is that Indian power plants using India s coal supply consume about 0 7 kg of coal per kWh of power generation whereas in the United States thermal power plants consume about 0 45 kg of coal per kWh In 2017 India imported nearly 130 Mtoe nearly 200 million tons of steam coal and coking coal 29 of total consumption to meet the demand in electricity cement and steel production 8 90 The Centre for Science and Environment has assessed the Indian coal based power sector as one of the most resource wasteful and polluting sectors in the world in part due to the high ash content in India s coal 91 India s Ministry of Environment and Forests has therefore mandated the use of coals whose ash content has been reduced to 34 or lower in power plants in urban ecologically sensitive and other critically polluted areas The coal ash reduction industry has grown rapidly in India with current capacity topping 90 megatonnes when citation needed Before a thermal power plant is approved for construction and commissioning in India it must undergo an extensive review process that includes environmental impact assessment 92 The Ministry of Environment and Forests has produced a technical guidance manual to help project proposers avoid environmental pollution from thermal power plants 93 As of 2016 the existing coal fired power stations in the utility and captive power sectors were estimated to require nearly 12 5 million INR per MW capacity to install pollution control equipment to comply with the latest emission norms set out by the Ministry of Environment and Forests 94 95 96 97 Most of the coal fired stations have not complied installation of flue gas de sulphurisation units for reducing the pollution 98 In April 2020 CPCB declared that over 42 000 MW thermal power plants have outlived their lives 99 India has also banned imports of pet coke for use as fuel 100 As a signatory to the Paris Agreement India is also reducing power generation from coal to control the emission of greenhouse gases 101 The state and central power generation companies are permitted by the Government of India to minimize the cost of coal transportation using flexible coal linkage swaps from inefficient plants to efficient plants and from plants situated far from coal mines to plants close to the pit head leading to a reduction in the cost of power 102 Although coal imports for consumption in the utility sector are declining the overall imports of steam coal are increasing as the local coal production is unable to meet the requirements of coal fired captive power plants 103 104 India is introducing single spot auctions exchanges for all type of coal consumers 105 Retirement of old thermal power plants Edit A thermal power plant in Rajasthan India s coal fired oil fired and natural gas fired thermal power plants are inefficient and replacing them with cheaper renewable technologies offers significant potential for greenhouse gas CO2 emission reduction India s thermal power plants emit 50 to 120 more CO2 per kWh produced compared to average emissions from their European Union EU 27 counterparts 106 The central government plans to retire coal based plants that are at least 25 years old and contributing excessive pollution totalling 11 000 MW of capacity 107 As of 2018 there is no similar retirement plan for the captive power sector In 2020 Carbon Tracker estimated that phasing out 20 years or more old coal fired plants and the coal fired plants under construction with electricity sale price exceeding INR 4 kWh with new renewables is more economical as these coal fired plants are imposing heavy financial burden on Discoms 108 Some diesel generator plants and gas turbine plants were also decommissioned in 2016 though they are best suitable for catering ancillary services 109 Integration of renewable power Edit India has committed to install 275 000 MW renewable energy capacity by 2027 110 The existing base load coal and gas based power plants need to be flexible enough to accommodate the variable renewable energy Also ramping up ramping down warm start up hot start up capabilities of existing coal based power stations are critical to accommodate the frequent variations in renewable power generation 111 112 It is also examined to use the retired coal based electric generators as synchronous condensers for improving the grid inertia when it is dominated by static power generation sources like solar and wind power 113 As the solar power plants remain idle during the night hours reactive power capability of the inverters installed as part of the solar power plant can also be used during the night time for solving the problem of very high voltage which occurs due to low loads on the transmission lines 114 Natural gas supply constraints Edit See also List of power stations in India Gas or Liquid Fuel Based The installed capacity of natural gas based power plants including the plants ready to be commissioned with the commencement of natural gas supply was nearly 26 765 MW at the end of the financial year 2014 15 These plants were operating at an overall plant load factor PLF of 22 due to a severe shortage of natural gas in the country 115 and the fact that imported liquid natural gas LNG was too expensive for power generation Many power stations were shut down throughout the year for a lack of natural gas supply 116 The natural gas shortage for power sector alone was nearly 100 million cubic metre per day at standard conditions 117 The break even price for switching from imported coal to LNG in electricity generation was estimated to be approximately US 6 per million British thermal units 20 MWh thermal energy 118 The Indian government has taken steps to enhance power generation from gas based power plants by waiving import duties and taxes 119 120 Gasification of Char Coal Gasification of coal or lignite or pet coke or biomass produces synthetic natural gas or syngas also known as coal gas or wood gas which is a mixture of hydrogen carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide gases 121 Coal gas can be converted into synthetic natural gas by using the Fischer Tropsch process at low pressure and high temperature Coal gas can also be produced by underground coal gasification if the coal deposits are located deep in the ground or it is uneconomical to mine the coal 122 Synthetic natural gas production technologies promise to dramatically improve India s supply of natural gas 123 The Dankuni coal complex produces syngas that is piped to industrial users in Calcutta 124 Many coal based fertiliser plants can also be economically retrofitted to produce synthetic natural gas It is estimated that the production cost for syngas could be below US 6 per million British thermal units 20 MWh 125 126 Earlier natural gas use in power generation was thought to be a bridge fuel as it emits far less CO2 below 50 when compared to coal use in power generation until renewable power generation without CO2 emissions become economical 127 Renewable power generation is already cheaper than coal and gas fueled power generation in India Now the bridge fuel concept is no more valid and existing gas based generation needs to compete with the coal based generation when there is no adequate renewable power generation including storage and peaking type hydropower The problem of stranded assets capacity is more deep rooted for gas based power plants than that of the coal based power plants as coal is far cheaper than natural gas in India Nuclear power Edit Main article Nuclear power in India Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant 2 x 1000 MW under construction in 2009 As of 31 March 2022 India had 6 78 GW of installed nuclear power generation capacity or nearly 1 7 of the total installed utility power generation capacity Nuclear plants generated 47 063 million kWh at 79 24 PLF in 2021 22 128 India s nuclear power plant development began in 1964 India signed an agreement with General Electric United States for the construction and commissioning of two boiling water reactors at Tarapur In 1967 this effort was placed under India s Department of Atomic Energy In 1971 India set up its first pressurized heavy water reactors with Canadian collaboration in Rajasthan In 1987 India created the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited to commercialize nuclear power The Nuclear Power Corporation of India is a public sector enterprise wholly owned by the Government of India under the administrative control of the Department of Atomic Energy The state owned company has ambitious plans to establish plants totalling to 63 GW generation capacity by 2032 129 India s nuclear power generation effort is subject to many safeguards and oversights Its environmental management system is ISO 14001 certified and it undergoes peer review by the World Association of Nuclear Operators including a pre start up peer review The Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited commented in its annual report for 2011 that its biggest challenge is to address public and policymaker perceptions about the safety of nuclear power particularly after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan 130 In 2011 India had 18 pressurized heavy water reactors in operation with another four projects launched totaling 2 8 GW capacity India is in the process of launching its first prototype fast breeder reactor using plutonium based fuel obtained by reprocessing the spent fuel of first stage reactors The prototype reactor is located in Tamil Nadu and has a capacity of 500 MW 131 India has nuclear power plants operating in the following states Maharashtra Gujarat Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh Tamil Nadu and Karnataka These reactors have an installed electricity generation capacity of between 100 MW and 1000 MW each The Kudankulam nuclear power plant KNPP is the single largest nuclear power station in India KNPP Unit 1 with a capacity of 1000 MWe was commissioned in July 2013 while Unit 2 also with a capacity of 1000 MWe attained criticality in 2016 Two additional units are under construction 132 The plant has suffered multiple shutdowns leading to calls for an expert panel to investigate 133 First 700 MWe PHWR unit under phase II of Kakrapar Atomic Power Station achieved first criticality in July 2020 and expected to begin commercial operation by December 2022 131 134 In 2011 uranium was discovered in the Tummalapalle uranium mine the country s largest uranium mine and possibly one of the world s largest The reserves were estimated at 64 000 tonnes and could be as large as 150 000 tonnes 135 The mine began operation in 2012 136 India s share of nuclear power plant generation capacity is 1 2 of worldwide nuclear power production capacity making it the 15th largest nuclear power producer India aims to supply 9 of its electricity needs with nuclear power by 2032 and 25 by 2050 130 137 Jaitapur Nuclear Power Project India s largest nuclear power plant project is planned to be implemented in partnership with Electricite de France under an agreement signed on 10 March 2018 138 India s government is developing up to 62 additional nuclear reactors mostly using thorium fuel which it expects to be operational by 2025 It is the only country in the world with a detailed funded government approved plan to focus on thorium based nuclear power 137 Renewable energy Edit India renewable electricity production by source Main article Renewable energy in India Mean wind speed India 139 On 12 August 2021 India s grid connected electricity generation capacity reached 100 GW from non conventional renewable technologies 43 140 and 46 21 GW from conventional renewable power or major hydroelectric power plants As of 12 August 2021 there are about 50 GW of projects under development and 27 GW that are tendered and yet to be auctioned 43 Installed capacity of non conventional renewable power 43 Type Capacity in MW Wind 39 247 05Solar 40 085 47Small Hydro Power Projects 4 786 81Biomass Power amp Gasification and Bagasse Cogeneration 10 145 93Waste to Power 168 64Total non conventional renewable Power Grid Connected 94 433 79Hydro power Edit Main articles Hydroelectric power in India and Power sector of Andhra Pradesh Pumped storage hydroelectricity projects Indira Sagar Dam partially completed in 2008 Nagarjuna Sagar Dam and the 810 MW hydroelectric power plant on the Krishna River The hydro electric power plants at Darjeeling and Shivanasamudra were among the first in Asia and were established in 1898 and 1902 respectively India s potential for hydropower has been assessed to be about 125 570 MW at a 60 load factor 141 India is ranked fourth globally by underutilized hydropower potential The estimated amount of viable hydropower varies with improved technology and the cost of electricity generation from other sources In addition there is an estimated 6 740 MW of potential for small mini and micro hydro generators and 56 sites for pumped storage schemes with an aggregate installed capacity of 94 000 MW have been identified 142 143 In 2020 the power tariff from Solar PV clubbed with pumped storage hydro have fallen below the coal based power plant tariffs in offering base load and peak load power supply 144 The installed hydropower capacity as of 31 March 2018 was approximately 45 293 MW 13 17 of the total installed utility capacity at the time 2 Small mini and micro hydro generators add another 4 486 MW capacity 2 The share of this sector operated by public companies is 97 145 Companies engaged in the development of hydroelectric power in India include the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation NHPC Northeast Electric Power Company NEEPCO Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam SJVNL Tehri Hydro Development Corporation and NTPC Hydro Pumped storage schemes offer the potential for centralized peak power stations for load management in the electricity grid 146 147 They also produce secondary seasonal power at no additional cost when rivers are flooding with excess water Storing electricity by alternative systems such as batteries compressed air storage systems etc is more costly than electricity production by standby generator India has already established nearly 4 785 MW pumped storage capacity as part of its installed hydro power plants 148 149 Solar power Edit Main article Solar power in India Global Horizontal Irradiation in India 150 Price history of silicon PV cells not modules since 1977 The great thing about solar power is that it is a technology and not a fuel It is unlimited and the more it is deployed the cheaper it would be 151 While the more limited fossil fuels are used the more expensive they become The solar energy sector in India offers potentially enormous capacity though little of this potential has so far been exploited Solar radiation of about 5 000 trillion kWh per year is incident over India s land mass with average daily solar power potential of 0 25 kWh m2 of used land area with available commercially proven technologies 152 As of 31 December 2019 the installed capacity was 33 73 GW or 2 of utility electricity generation 80 Solar power plants require nearly 2 4 hectares 0 024 km2 land per MW capacity which is similar to coal fired power plants when life cycle coal mining consumptive water storage and ash disposal areas are taken into account and hydropower plants when the submergence area of the water reservoir is included Solar plants with 1 33 million MW capacity could be installed in India on 1 of its land 32 000 square km Large tracts of land that are unproductive barren and devoid of vegetation exist in all parts of India exceeding 8 of its total area These are potentially suitable for solar power 153 It has been estimated that if 32 000 square km of these wastelands were used for solar power generation 2000 billion kWh of electricity could be produced twice the total power generated in 2013 14 At a price of 4 kWh this would result in a land annual productivity yield of 1 0 million US 13 000 per acre which compares favorably with many industrial areas and is many times more than the best productive irrigated agriculture lands 154 Building solar power plants on marginally productive lands offers the potential for solar electricity to replace all of India s fossil fuel energy requirements natural gas coal lignite and crude oil 155 and could offer per capita energy consumption at par with USA Japan for the peak population expected during its demographic transition 156 The sale price of power generated by solar photovoltaics fell to 2 00 2 5 US per kWh in November 2020 which is lower than any other type of power generation in India 157 158 In the same year the levelised tariff in US for solar electricity fell to 1 31 cents kWh far below the solar PV sale tariff in India 159 In 2020 the power tariff from Solar PV clubbed with pumped storage hydro or battery storage have fallen below the coal based power plant tariffs in offering base load and peak load power supply 144 Canal Solar Power Project in Kadi Gujarat Land acquisition is a challenge for solar farm projects in India Some state governments are exploring innovative ways to address land availability for example by deploying solar capacity above irrigation canals 160 This allows solar energy to be harvested while simultaneously reducing the loss of irrigation water by solar evaporation 161 The state of Gujarat was first to implement the Canal Solar Power Project using solar panels on a 19 000 km 12 000 mi long network of Narmada canals across the state to generate electricity It was the first such project in India Synergy with other types of power generationA major disadvantage of solar power is that it produces electricity only in daylight and not during nighttime or cloudy daytime This disadvantage can be overcome by installing grid storage such as pumped storage hydroelectricity 162 A proposed large scale engineering project to interlink Indian rivers envisages coastal reservoirs for harnessing river waters that would also create pumped storage hydropower capacity for use on daily basis by consuming the surplus solar power available during the day time 163 Existing and future hydropower stations can also be expanded with additional pumped storage hydroelectricity units to cater for nighttime electricity consumption Most of the groundwater pumping power required can be met directly by solar power during the daytime 164 Concentrated solar power plants with thermal storage are also emerging as cheaper US 5 kWh and cleaner Load following power plants than fossil fuel power plants They can respond to demand round the clock and work as base load power plants when there is excess solar energy A mix of solar thermal and solar photovoltaic plants offers the potential to match load fluctuations without requiring costly battery storage Wind power Edit Main article Wind power in India Wind farm in Rajasthan Wind turbines midst India s agricultural farms Wind farms midst paddy fields in India Biomass pellet fuel from India India has the fourth largest installed wind power capacity in the world The development of wind power in India began in the 1990s in Tamil Nadu and significantly increased in the last decade As of 31 August 2022 the installed capacity of wind power was 41 205 GW spread across many states of India 140 165 The largest wind power generating state is Tamil Nadu accounting for nearly 23 of installed capacity followed in decreasing order by Gujarat Maharashtra Rajasthan and Karnataka 165 166 In 2015 16 wind power accounted for 8 5 of India s total installed power capacity and 2 5 of the country s power output India aims to install a total 60 GW of wind power capacity by 2022 167 168 The wind power tariff of around 2 5 INR kWh is the cheapest of all power generation sources in India 169 The offshore wind power potential of India is nearly 112 GW up to 50 metres water depth and nearly 195 GW up to 1000 metres water depth 170 As of August 2022 no offshore wind power installation is under construction or in operation The levelised cost of electricity LCOE has fallen to US 50 per MWh for offshore wind power plants 170 Biomass power Edit Biomass is organic matter from living organisms As a renewable energy source biomass can either be used directly via combustion to produce heat or indirectly after converting it to various forms of biofuel using a range of methods which are broadly classified into thermal chemical and biochemical methods Biomass bagasse forestry domestic organic wastes industrial organic wastes organic residue from biogas plants and agricultural residue and waste can all be used as fuel to produce electricity 171 172 Nearly 750 million tons of biomass that is not edible by cattle is available annually in India 173 174 The total use of biomass to produce heat in India was nearly 177 Mtoe in 2013 175 20 of households in India use biomass and charcoal for cooking purposes This traditional use of biomass is being replaced by liquefied petroleum gas in rural areas resulting in increased burning of biomass in fields This has become a major source of air pollution in nearby towns and cities 176 173 Torrefied biomassLarge quantities of imported coal are being used in pulverised coal fired power stations Raw biomass cannot be used directly in the pulverised coal mills as it is difficult to grind into fine powder due to caking However torrefaction makes it possible for biomass to replace coal 177 The hot flue gas of existing coal fired power stations can be used as a heat source for torrefaction so that biomass can be cofired with coal 178 179 Surplus agriculture crop residue biomass is beginning to be used for this purpose 180 181 Instead of shutting down retirement of coal fired power plants due to concerns over pollution it has been argued that these units can be retrofitted economically to produce electricity from biomass 182 183 Biomass contains substantial oxygen and lesser ash to make retrofitting of old units less capital intensive Biomass power plants can also sell Renewable Energy Certificates increasing their profitability 184 185 Cofiring of biomass up to 10 with coal in existing pulverised coal fired power stations is successfully implemented in India 186 187 Central Government has made cofiring minimum 5 of biomass mandatary from October 2022 in all coal fired plants 188 189 BiogasIn 2011 India started a new initiative to demonstrate the utility of medium size mixed feed biogas fertilizer pilot plants The government approved 21 projects with an aggregate capacity of 37 016 cubic meters per day of which 2 projects were successfully commissioned by December 2011 190 India commissioned a further 158 projects under its Biogas based Distributed Grid Power Generation program with a total installed capacity of about 2 MW In 2018 India has set a target of producing 15 million tons of biogas bio CNG by installing 5 000 large scale commercial type biogas plants which can produce daily 12 5 tons of bio CNG by each plant 191 As of May 2022 nearly 35 such plants are in operation 192 Rejected organic solids from biogas plants can be used in coal plants after torrefaction Biogas is primarily methane and can also be used to generate protein rich feed for cattle poultry and fish by growing Methylococcus capsulatus a bacterium that grows directly on methane This can be done economically in villages with low requirements for land and water 193 194 195 The carbon dioxide gas produced as a by product from these units can be used in cheaper production of algae oil or spirulina from algae cultivation which may eventually substitute for crude oil 196 197 Using biogas for protein rich feed production is also eligible for carbon credits as this sequesters carbon from the atmosphere 198 There is significant potential to extract useful biomass from breweries textile mills fertilizer plants the paper and pulp industry solvent extraction units rice mills petrochemical plants and other industries 199 The government is exploring several ways to use agro waste or biomass in rural areas to improve the rural economy 200 201 For example biomass gasifier technologies are being explored to produce power from surplus biomass resources such as rice husk crop stalks small wood chips and other agro residues in rural areas The largest biomass based power plant in India at Sirohi Rajasthan has a capacity of 20 MW During 2011 India installed 25 rice husk based gasifier systems for distributed power generation in 70 remote villages of Bihar including a total of 1 20 MW in Gujarat and 0 5 MW in Tamil Nadu In addition gasifier systems were installed at 60 rice mills in India 190 Geothermal energy Edit India s geothermal energy installed capacity is experimental and commercial use is insignificant According to some estimates India has 10 600 MW of geothermal energy available 202 The resource map for India has been grouped into six geothermal provinces 203 Himalayan Province Tertiary orogenic belt with tertiary magmatism Faulted blocks province the Aravalli range Naga Lushi the west coast regions and the Narmada Son lineament Volcanic arc province the Andaman and Nicobar arc Deep sedimentary basins of Tertiary age such as the Cambay basin Radioactive province Surajkund Hazaribagh and Jharkhand Cratonic province Peninsular IndiaIndia has about 340 hot springs spread over the country Of these 62 are distributed along the northwest Himalaya in the states of Jammu and Kashmir Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand They are found concentrated in a 30 50 km wide thermal band mostly along the river valleys The Naga Lusai and West Coast Provinces also manifest a series of thermal springs The Andaman and Nicobar arc is the only place in India where volcanic activity continues potentially a good site for geothermal energy The Cambay geothermal belt is 200 km long and 50 km wide with Tertiary sediments Thermal springs have been reported from the belt although they are not of very high temperature or flow levels High subsurface temperature and thermal fluid have been reported in deep drill wells in depth ranges of 1 7 to 1 9 km during drilling in this area Steam blowout has also been reported in drill holes in a depth range of 1 5 to 3 4 km The thermal springs in India s peninsular region are more related to the faults which allow water to circulate to considerable depths The circulating water acquires heat from the normal thermal gradient in the area and can emerge at a high temperature 203 In a December 2011 report India identified six promising geothermal sites for the development of geothermal energy In decreasing order of potential these are Tattapani Chhattisgarh Puga Jammu amp Kashmir Cambay Graben Gujarat Manikaran Himachal Pradesh Surajkund Haryana Chhumathang Jammu amp Kashmir Puga and Chumathang area in Ladakh are deemed as the most promising geothermal fields in India These areas were discovered in 1970s and initial exploratory efforts were made in the 1980s by Geological Survey of India GSI On 6 February 2021 the ONGC Energy Center OEC signed a Memorandum of Understanding MoU with Ladakh and the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council Leh in the presence of current Lieutenant governor Radha Krishna Mathur 204 Tidal power Edit Tidal power also called tidal energy is a form of hydropower that converts energy obtained from tides into useful forms of power mainly electricity Local effects such as shelving funneling reflection and resonance can increase the potential of tidal energy in certain regions India s potential to harness tidal energy is significant Energy can be extracted from tides in several ways In one method a reservoir is created behind a barrier or barrage and tidal waters are allowed to pass through turbines in the barrier to generate electricity This method requires mean tidal differences greater than 4 metres and favourable topographical conditions to keep installation costs low The Gulf of Khambhat and the Gulf of Kutch on India s west coast with maximum tidal ranges of 11 m and 8 m respectively and an average tidal range of 6 77 m and 5 23 m are promising sites for this type of technology The Ganges Delta in the Sundarbans West Bengal is another possibility although it offers significantly less recoverable energy the maximum tidal range in Sunderbans is approximately 5 m with an average tidal range of 2 97 m It is estimated that barrage technology could harvest about 8 GW from tidal energy in India primarily in Gujarat citation needed The barrage approach has several disadvantages however one being that a badly engineered barrage can have significant negative effects on migratory fishes marine ecosystems and aquatic life citation needed Integrated barrage technology plants can also be expensive to build In December 2011 the Ministry of New amp Renewable Energy Government of India and the Renewable Energy Development Agency of West Bengal jointly approved and agreed to implement India s first 3 75 MW Durgaduani mini tidal power project 205 Another tidal wave technology harvests energy from surface waves or from pressure fluctuations below the sea surface A report from the Ocean Engineering Centre at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras estimated the annual wave energy potential along the Indian coast is 5 to 15 MW metre suggesting a theoretical maximum potential for electricity harvesting along India s 7500 kilometer coastline of about 40 GW 206 However the realistic economical potential is likely to be considerably less than this 206 A significant barrier to surface energy harvesting is that its equipment may interfere with fishing and other sea bound vessels particularly in unsettled weather India built its first surface energy harvesting technology demonstration plant in Vizhinjam near Thiruvananthapuram citation needed The third approach to harvesting tidal energy is ocean thermal energy technology This approach harvests the solar energy trapped in ocean waters Oceans have a thermal gradient the surface being much warmer than the deeper levels of the ocean This thermal gradient may be harvested using the modified Rankine cycle India s National Institute of Ocean Technology NIOT has attempted this approach without success In 2003 NIOT attempted to build and deploy a 1 MW demonstration plant with Saga University of Japan 207 but mechanical problems prevented success After initial tests near Kerala the unit was scheduled for redeployment and further development in the Lakshadweep Islands in 2005 citation needed Electricity transmission and distribution Edit Electricity transmission grid in eastern India A tower supporting a 220 kV transmission line near Ennore Chennai Main article National Grid India See also Availability based tariff As of 2013 India has a single wide area synchronous grid that covers the entire country except distant islands 208 Installed transmission lines and distribution capacity MVA as of 31 July 2018 209 210 Capacity Substations MVA Transmission lines circuit km c km MVA ratio 211 HVDC 220 kV amp above 22 500 15 556 0 691765 kV 197 500 36 673 0 185400 kV 292 292 173 172 0 707220 kV 335 696 170 748 0 592220 kV amp above 847 988 396 149 0 467 source source source source source source source source source source India lit up at night This image courtesy of NASA was taken by the crew of Expedition 29 on 21 October 2011 It starts over Turkmenistan moving east India begins past the long wavy solid orange line marking the lights at the India Pakistan borderline New Delhi India s capital and the Kathiawar Peninsula are lit So are Mumbai Hyderabad Chennai Bangalore and many smaller cities in central and southern India as this International Space Station s video shifts south eastward through southern India into the Bay of Bengal Lightning storms are also present represented by the flashing lights throughout the video The pass ends over western Indonesia The total length of high voltage HV transmission lines 220kV and above would be enough to form a square matrix of area 266 km2 i e a square grid 16 3 km on a side so that on average there is at least one HV line within a distance of 8 15 km over the entire area of the country This represents a total of almost 20 more HV transmission lines than that of the United States 322 000 km 200 000 mi of 230 kV and above However the Indian grid transmits far less electricity 212 The installed length of transmission lines of 66 kV and above is 649 833 km 403 788 mi on average there is at least one 66 kV transmission line within 4 95 km across the country 3 The length of secondary transmission lines 400 V and above is 10 381 226 km 6 450 595 mi as of 31 March 2018 3 The spread of total transmission lines 400 V would be sufficient to form a square matrix of area 0 36 km2 i e on average at least one transmission line within 0 31 km distance over the entire area of the country In a future grid dominated by decentralized power generation like solar and wind power unscientific expansion of the electrical grid would yield negative results due to braess paradox 213 The all time maximum peak load met was 182 610 MW on 30 May 2019 214 The maximum achieved demand factor of substations is nearly 60 at the 220 kV level However the operational performance of the system is not satisfactory in meeting peak electricity loads 215 216 This has led to the initiation of detailed forensic engineering studies with a plan to make capital investments in a smart grid that maximises the utility of the existing transmission infrastructure 49 The introduction of an availability based tariff ABT originally helped to stabilize the Indian transmission grids citation needed However as the grid transitions to power surplus the ABT has become less useful The July 2012 blackout affecting the north of the country was the largest power grid failure in history as measured by the number of people affected citation needed India s aggregate transmission and commercial ATC losses were nearly 21 35 in 2017 18 217 3 218 This compares unfavorably to the total ATC loss in the electricity sector of the United States which was only 6 6 out of 4 404 billion kWh electricity supplied during the year 2018 219 The Indian government set a target of reducing losses to 17 1 by 2017 and to 14 1 by 2022 A high proportion of non technical losses are caused by illegal tapping of lines faulty electric meters and fictitious power generation that underestimates actual consumption and also contributes to reduced payment collection A case study in Kerala estimated that replacing faulty meters could reduce distribution losses from 34 to 29 57 Foreign electricity trade EditIndia s National Grid is synchronously interconnected to Bhutan and asynchronously linked with Bangladesh Myanmar and Nepal 220 An undersea interconnector to Sri Lanka India Sri Lanka HVDC Interconnection have been proposed 221 India has been exporting electricity to Bangladesh Myanmar and Nepal and importing excess electricity from Bhutan 222 223 In 2015 Nepal imported 224 21 MW of electric power from India and Bangladesh imported 500MW 224 225 In 2018 Bangladesh proposed importing 10 000 MW power from India 226 To encourage the carbon neutral solar power generation plans are made to transform the Indian national grid into a transnational grid expanding up to Vietnam towards east and Iraq towards west spanning nearly 7 000 km wide 227 Being at the central location of the widened grid India will be able to import the excess solar power available outside its territory at cheaper prices to meet the morning and evening peak load power demands without much costly energy storage 228 Regulation and administration EditThe Ministry of Power is India s top union government body regulating the electrical energy sector in India The ministry was created on 2 July 1992 It is responsible for planning policy formulation processing of projects for investment decisions monitoring project implementation training and manpower development and the administration and enactment of legislation in regard to power generation transmission and distribution 229 It is also responsible for the administration of India s Electricity Act 2003 the Energy Conservation Act 2001 and has the responsibility of undertaking amendments to these Acts when necessary to meet the union government s policy objectives Electricity is a concurrent list subject at Entry 38 in List III of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India In India s federal governance structure this means that both the union government and India s state governments are involved in establishing policies and laws for the electricity sector This requires the union government and individual state governments to enter into memoranda of understanding to help expedite projects in the individual states 230 To disseminate information to the public on power purchases by the distribution companies discoms the government of India recently started posting data on its website on a daily basis 231 Trading Edit Bulk power purchasers can buy electricity on a daily basis for short medium and long term durations from a reverse e auction facility 232 The electricity prices transacted by the reverse e auction facility are far less than the prices agreed under bilateral agreements 233 The commodity derivative exchange Multi Commodity Exchange has sought permission to offer electricity futures markets in India 234 The union government of India is also planning reverse procurement process in which generators and discoms with surplus power can seek e bids for power supply for up to a one year period to put an end to bilateral contracts and determine the market based price for electricity 235 Energy saving certificates PAT various renewable purchase obligations RPO and renewable energy certificates REC are also traded on the power exchanges regularly 236 237 Government owned power companies Edit India s Ministry of Power administers central government owned companies involved in the generation of electricity in India These include the National Thermal Power Corporation Neyveli Lignite Corporation the SJVN the Damodar Valley Corporation the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation and the Nuclear Power Corporation of India The Power Grid Corporation of India is also administered by the Ministry it is responsible for the inter state transmission of electricity and the development of the national grid The Ministry works with state governments on matters related to state government owned corporations in India s electricity sector Examples of state corporations include the Telangana Power Generation Corporation the Andhra Pradesh Power Generation Corporation Limited the Assam Power Generation Corporation Limited the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board the Maharashtra State Electricity Board the Kerala State Electricity Board the West Bengal State Electricity Distribution Company and Gujarat Urja Vikas Nigam Limited Funding of power infrastructure Edit Borrowings by state owned discoms amp commercial losses of discoms India s Ministry of Power administers the Rural Electrification Corporation Limited and the Power Finance Corporation Limited These central government owned public sector enterprises provide loans and guarantees for public and private electricity sector infrastructure projects in India Excessive plant construction loans at 75 of overestimated costs on overrated plant capacities have led to stranded assets of US 40 to 60 billion 238 239 The central and state owned power generators escaped this crisis as they had entered PPAs with state owned monopolistic discoms on a cost plus basis at higher than prevailing market power tariffs without undergoing competitive bidding process Many direct and indirect subsidies are given to various sectors 240 Budgetary support Edit After the enactment of Electricity Act 2003 budgetary support to the power sector is negligible 241 Many State Electricity Boards were separated into their component parts after the act came into force creating separate entities for generating transmitting and distributing power 242 Human resource development Edit 1 6 million volt impulse generator at the High Voltage Lab of Jabalpur Engineering College The rapid growth of the electricity sector in India has generated high demand for trained personnel India is making efforts to expand energy education and to enable existing educational institutions to introduce courses related to energy capacity addition production operations and maintenance This initiative includes conventional and renewable energy The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy announced that State Renewable Energy Agencies are being supported to organize short term training programs for installation operation and maintenance and repair of renewable energy systems in locations where intensive renewable energy programs are being implemented Renewable Energy Chairs have been established at the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee and the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur 190 The Central Training Institute Jabalpur is a training institute for power distribution engineering and management citation needed The NTPC School of Business Noida has initiated an energy centered two year post graduate diploma in the management program and a one year post graduate diploma in management executive program to cater to the growing need for management professionals in this area citation needed Education and availability of skilled workers are expected to be a key challenge in India s effort to expand its electricity sector Problems with India s power sector EditIndia s electricity sector faces many issues including Inadequate last mile connectivity The country already has adequate generation and transmission capacity to meet the full consumer demand both temporally and spatially 3 However due to the lack of last mile link up between all electricity consumers and a reliable power supply to exceed 99 many consumers depend on diesel generators 49 Nearly 80 billion kWh of electricity is generated annually in India by diesel generator sets that consume nearly 15 million tons of diesel oil Over 10 million households use battery storage UPS as back ups in case of load shedding 243 India imports nearly US 2 billion worth of battery storage UPS every year 244 As overhead lines cause distribution problems during rain and wind storms there is a plan to lay buried cables from low voltage substations to supply cheaper emergency power in cities and towns and thus reduce diesel oil consumption by diesel generator sets and the installation of UPS systems citation needed Demand build up measures Electricity intensive industries consume the cheaper electricity average price Rs 2 5 per kWhr available from the grid instead of running their own coal gas oil fired captive power plants 245 246 The captive power generation capacity by such plants is nearly 53 000 MW and they are mainly established in steel fertilizer aluminium cement etc industries 247 3 These plants can draw cheaper electricity from the grid on short term open access STOA basis avoiding their own higher cost of electricity generation and diverting power from other consumers 248 249 Some of these idling captive power plants can be used for ancillary services or grid reserve service and earn extra revenue 250 251 Unequal electricity distribution Almost all households have access to electricity 1 However most households find the electricity supply intermittent and unreliable 252 At the same time many power stations are idling for lack of electricity demand and the idling generation capacity is sufficient to supply the needs of households lacking electricity three times over Erratic power pricing In general industrial and commercial consumers subsidize domestic and agricultural consumers 253 254 Government giveaways such as free electricity for farmers created partly to curry political favor have depleted the cash reserves of state run electricity distribution system and led to debts of 2 5 trillion US 31 billion 255 This has financially crippled the distribution network and its ability to pay to purchase power in the absence of subsidies from state governments 256 This situation has been worsened by state government departments that do not pay their electricity bills Over rated capacity Many coal fired plants are overrated above the actual maximum continuous rating MCR capacity 257 to allow the plant cost to be inflated 258 These plants operate 15 to 10 below their declared capacity on a daily basis and rarely operate at declared capacity undermining grid stability Lack of timely information on load and demand Intraday graphs at 15 minute or more frequent intervals are required to understand the shortcomings of the power grid with respect to grid frequency including comprehensive data collected from SCADA for all grid connected generating stations 100 KW and load data from all substations 259 Lack of adequate coal supply Despite abundant reserves of coal power plants are frequently under supplied India s monopoly coal producer state controlled Coal India is constrained by primitive mining techniques and is rife with theft and corruption citation needed Poor coal transport infrastructure has worsened these problems Most of India s coal lies under protected forests or designated tribal lands and efforts to mine additional deposits have been resisted Poor gas pipeline connectivity and infrastructure India has abundant coal bed methane and natural gas potential However a giant new offshore natural gas field has delivered far less gas than claimed causing a shortage of natural gas Transmission distribution and consumer level losses Losses exceed 30 including the auxiliary power consumption of thermal power stations and fictitious electricity generation by wind generators solar power plants amp independent power producers IPPs etc Resistance to energy efficiency in the residential building sector Continuous urbanization and the growth of population result in increased power consumption in buildings The belief still predominates among stakeholders that energy efficient buildings are more expensive than conventional buildings adversely affecting the greening of the building sector 260 Resistance to hydroelectric power projects Hydroelectric power projects in India s mountainous north and northeast regions have been slowed down by ecological environmental and rehabilitation controversies coupled with public interest litigation Resistance to nuclear power generation Political activism since the Fukushima disaster has reduced progress in this sector The track record of executing nuclear power plants is also very poor in India 261 134 Theft of power The financial loss due to theft of electricity is estimated at 16 billion yearly citation needed Key implementation challenges for India s electricity sector include efficient performance of new project management and execution ensuring availability and appropriate quality of fuel developing the large coal and natural gas resources available in India land acquisition obtaining environmental clearances at state and central government level and training skilled manpower 262 Electricity as a substitute to imported LPG and kerosene EditSee also Energy in India India s net import of liquefied petroleum gas LPG is 6 093 million tons and the domestic consumption is 13 568 million tons with 41 546 crores subsidy to domestic consumers in 2012 13 263 The LPG import content is nearly 40 of total consumption in India 264 The affordable electricity retail tariff 860 Kcal Kwh at 74 heating efficiency to replace LPG net calorific value 11 000 Kcal Kg at 40 heating efficiency in domestic cooking is up to 10 2 Kwh when the retail price of LPG cylinder is 1000 without subsidy with 14 2 kg LPG content 265 Replacing LPG consumption with electricity would reduce imports substantially 266 The domestic consumption of kerosene is 7 349 million tons with 30 151 crores subsidy to the domestic consumers in 2012 13 The subsidized retail price of kerosene is 13 69 liter whereas the export import price is 48 00 liter The affordable electricity retail tariff 860 Kcal Kwh at 74 heating efficiency to replace kerosene net calorific value 8240 Kcal liter at 40 heating efficiency in domestic cooking is up to 9 27 kWh when the kerosene retail price is 48 liter In 2014 15 the plant load factor PLF of coal fired thermal power stations was only 64 46 These stations can run above 85 PLF if there is adequate electricity demand 267 The additional electricity generation at 85 PLF is nearly 240 billion kWh enough to replace all the LPG and kerosene consumption in domestic sector 268 The incremental cost of generating additional electricity is only the coal fuel cost less than 3 Kwh Enhancing the PLF of coal fired stations and encouraging domestic electricity consumers to substitute electricity in place of LPG and kerosene in household cooking would reduce government subsidies It has been proposed that domestic consumers who are willing to surrender subsidized LPG kerosene permits should be given a free electricity connection and a subsidized electricity tariff 269 Substantial scope is also present in micro small and medium enterprises MSME to switch over to electricity from fossil fuels to reduce cost of production provided uninterrupted power supply is ensured 270 Since 2017 IPPs have offered to sell solar and wind power below 3 00 Kwh to feed into the high voltage grid After considering distribution costs and losses solar power appears to be a viable economic option for replacing the LPG and kerosene used in the domestic sector Electric vehicles EditSee also Electric vehicle industry in India The retail prices of petrol and diesel are high enough in India to make electricity driven vehicles relatively economical 271 The retail price of diesel was 101 00 litre in 2021 22 and the retail price of petrol was 110 00 litre The affordable retail electricity price to replace diesel would be up to 19 Kwh 860 Kcal Kwh at 75 input electricity to shaft power efficiency versus diesel s net calorific value of 8572 Kcal liter at 40 fuel energy to crankshaft power efficiency and the comparable number to replace petrol would be up to 28 Kwh 860 Kcal Kwh at 75 input electricity to shaft power efficiency versus petrol s net calorific value at 7693 Kcal litre at 33 fuel energy to crankshaft power efficiency In 2012 13 India consumed 15 744 million tons of petrol and 69 179 million tons of diesel both mainly produced from imported crude oil 263 Electricity driven vehicles are expected to become popular in India when energy storage battery technology offers improved range longer life and lower maintenance 272 273 Vehicle to grid options are also attractive potentially allowing electric vehicles to help to mitigate peak loads in the electricity grid The potential for continuous charging of electric vehicles through wireless electricity transmission technology is being explored by Indian companies and others 274 275 276 Energy reserves EditIndia has abundant solar wind hydro including pumped storage and biomass power potential In addition as of January 2011 India had approximately 38 trillion cubic feet Tcf of proven natural gas reserves the world s 26th largest reserve 277 The United States Energy Information Administration estimates that India produced approximately 1 8 Tcf of natural gas in 2010 while consuming roughly 2 3 Tcf of natural gas India already produces coalbed methane See also Edit Energy portalEnergy in India Energy policy of India Oil and gas industry in India Climate change in India East West Gas Pipeline India List of electricity organisations in India Central Electricity Authority India List of power stations in India Indian Rivers Inter link List of countries by electricity productionNotes EditReferences Edit a b c d Households electrification in India Retrieved 21 August 2018 a b c d e f Power Sector at a Glance ALL INDIA Government of India Ministry of Power powermin gov in Retrieved 24 November 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Growth of Electricity Sector in India from 1947 2020 PDF Central Electricity Authority October 2020 Retrieved 22 September 2021 IEA India a b India electricity prices December 2020 GlobalPetrolPrices com Retrieved 21 September 2021 BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2021 page 63 PDF Retrieved 23 November 2021 a b c d Growth of Electricity Sector in India from 1947 2020 PDF CEA Retrieved 15 April 2020 a b BP Statistical Review of World Energy June 2019 PDF Retrieved 5 August 2019 Tariff amp duty of electricity supply in India report CEA Govt of India March 2014 Power generation report 2021 22 PDF report CEA Govt of India 1 April 2022 Retrieved 1 April 2022 Koyala Darpan Coal Dashboard Retrieved 17 February 2022 Global electricity review India 28 March 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 National Electricity Plan 2022 27 PDF September 2022 Retrieved 14 September 2022 National Electricity Plan Generation 2018 Retrieved 25 March 2021 Optimal generation capacity mix PDF CEA Govt of India January 2020 Retrieved 12 July 2020 Let there be light The Telegraph 26 April 2009 Electricity arrives in Mumbai Archived from the original on 2 February 2013 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Archives Darjeeling Hydro Power System IET history The IET Retrieved 29 July 2015 NYOOOZ Simply News Local News India News City News Politics Daily News amp Analysis 20 November 2011 Relic of India s first electric railway to be dismantled dna Retrieved 29 July 2015 ह द खबर Latest News in Hindi ह द सम च र त ज खबर Cochin International Airport set to become worlds s first fully solar powered major airport LiveMint Kochi India 18 August 2015 Menon Supriya 9 October 2015 How is the world s first solar powered airport faring BBC News BBC News Retrieved 1 December 2016 a b c One Nation One Grid Power Grid Corporation of India Retrieved 2 December 2016 Indian power system becomes largest operating synchronous grid in the world The Times of India Retrieved 2 December 2016 Draft National Electricity Plan 2016 CEA PDF Retrieved 11 December 2016 a b Will try to keep power prices lower says Piyush Goyal Retrieved 13 January 2016 a b Dark future ahead 11 000 mw thermal power capacity lying idle largest outage is in the north Retrieved 13 January 2016 International oil market watch Naphtha spot price Bunker fuel spot price Global LNG prices lose ground on weak demand Retrieved 27 February 2016 LNG looks poised to follow crude oil s plunge Peaking power generated from imported LNG at Rs 4 70 per unit Retrieved 21 March 2016 Global coal price on downslide no cheer for Indian power producers Retrieved 13 December 2015 Govt asks Coal India to liquidate pithead stock Business Standard Press Trust of India 28 January 2016 Tim Buckley Kashish Shah 21 November 2017 India s Electricity Sector Transformation PDF Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis p 2 Retrieved 5 May 2018 India can achieve 1 650 billion units of electricity next year Piyush Goyal Retrieved 9 July 2016 Mapped The 1 2 Billion People Without Access to Electricity Retrieved 29 November 2019 States resolve to provide 24x7 power to everyone by March 2019 The Economic Times Retrieved 18 June 2016 Singh Sarita Government decides to electrify 5 98 crore unelectrified households by December 2018 The Economic Times Retrieved 20 June 2016 Power Sector at a Glance ALL INDIA a b c d All India Installed power capacity PDF Central Electricity Authority April 2020 Retrieved 3 May 2020 All India Installed power capacity PDF Central Electricity Authority April 2021 Retrieved 30 April 2021 Thermal power projects under construction as on 1 April 2021 PDF Central Electricity Authority April 2021 Retrieved 30 April 2021 a b c d Energy statistics 2022 PDF CSO GoI Retrieved 26 January 2022 List of major captive power plants 3 October 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2018 Gensets add up to under half of installed power capacity August 2014 18 August 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2015 a b c Modification to existing transmission lines to double the capacity Retrieved 9 June 2015 The True Cost of Providing Energy to Telecom Towers in India PDF Retrieved 29 August 2015 All India installed capacitY in MW of power stations As on 30 11 2021 PDF Central Electricity Authority of India Load Generation Balance Report 2020 21 PDF Retrieved 9 December 2020 India wont need extra power plants for next three years Says government report The Economic Times Retrieved 13 January 2016 Average spot power price to be less than Rs 3 5 per unit in May Retrieved 12 May 2019 Is a distress sale on by private power producers Retrieved 21 July 2015 Indian power plants find Rs1 2 trillion of capacity has no takers 29 June 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2015 a b Uwe Remme et al February 2011 Technology development prospects for the Indian power sector PDF International Energy Agency France OECD Analysis of the energy trends in the European Union amp Asia to 2030 PDF Centre for Energy Environment 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