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India’s clean fuel aim falls short of actual generation

  • Market: Electricity
  • 18/07/25

India has reached its goal to have 50pc of its installed power generation capacity based on non-fossil fuel sources — but faces challenges in translating the new capacity into actual power generation, market participants told Argus.

India reached the goal in June this year — five-years ahead of the 2030 target it had set under the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) to the Paris Climate Agreement.

But its reliance on coal and gas continues.

India relies on thermal power generation to meet base load power demand with coal-fired plants contributing over 70pc of the total energy generated. Non-fossil fuel sources, including renewables, nuclear and hydro power generation account for only 28pc of electricity generation, government data show.

India's installed capacity of non-fossil fuel sources, that includes renewables, reached 234GW as of 30 June, while nuclear power reached 8.7GW, making up half of India's power generation capacity of 484.4GW in June, according to power ministry data.

Renewables and nuclear power generation stood at 195GW and 8.1GW, respectively, during the same time last year.

India's overall power generation was lower this year falling by 5pc on the year to 159.67GW in May due to an early onset of monsoon, latest government data show. Electricity generation data for June was not yet available.

Power generation from non-fossil fuel sources showed an uptick this year, as against thermal power generation. (See table)

Continued dependence on coal

Despite the rise in non-fossil fuel sources, installed capacity of thermal power generation including coal and natural gas, remained stable this year at 242GW as of 30 June compared with 242.9GW last year, on the back of a decline in gas-fired power generation, power ministry data show.

India has temporarily shut 4.4GW of gas-fired power capacity from April due to weak domestic gas supply and elevated import prices.

Interestingly, coal-fired power generation capacity showed an uptick of 4GW at 214.7GW as of 30 June, compared with 210.9GW last year, the data showed.

India had approved about 15GW of new coal-fired power capacity last year — the second-largest volume addition globally for coal-fired power generation after China.

India's rising use of solar and wind power also faces grid integration challenges due to the intermittent nature of the generation. The government has been working on enhancing storage via battery systems and smart grids to address these issues.

India's electricity generation in GW
Source May-25May-24Diff
Thermal 114.1127.8-10.7
Nuclear5.14.515.5
Hydro (Large)13.312.65.0
Renewables26.622.518.2
Bhutan Import0.60.1338.5
Total159.7167.5-4.7

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