HomeNewsBusinessCoal supplies shortfall alone didn’t create the power crisis

Coal supplies shortfall alone didn’t create the power crisis

What led to the coal crisis?  Was it only an unusual spike in demand?

October 12, 2021 / 17:47 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

India’s power situation continued to remain critical as 17 thermal power plants had zero days of coal stocks as of October 10, with production and despatches from coal mines falling short of demand. Another 26 plants had stocks for one day. Together these 43 plants can produce about 51.36 gigawatts (GW) of power with a regular supply of fuel, that’s about 31% of the power from coal-fired thermal power plants.

Most other power plants are not in a comfortable position either. On average, 135 coal-fired thermal power stations had stocks to last just four days against a normative stock requirement of a little more than 21 days.

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Almost all plants that reported zero days of coal stocks were among those that were required to hold enough inventory to generate power for 30 days, including the 1.82 GW NTPC-owned Dadri plant that supplies power to the National Capital Region. Ten of 20 coal-fired power plants, each with generating capacity of 2 GW or more, were operating with two days worth of stocks or less, as subsidiaries of Coal India struggle to increase output to match the spurt in power demand.

Coal is the predominant source of power, with over 70 percent of India’s power generated by coal-fired plants. Therefore, any supply disruptions caused by accidents at mines, extreme weather events, labour strife and logistics problems can affect electricity generation within days. Coal mining in the first quarter of the fiscal year was affected when many miners fell ill with the Covid19 infection and in the second quarter due to flooding of mines caused by excessive rains.