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India’s NTPC starts up Telangana coal-fired power unit

  • : Coal
  • 23/10/03

Indian state-controlled utility NTPC has raised its electricity generation capacity to 73.82GW with the addition of a coal-fired plant in the southern state of Telangana, which is likely to boost coal consumption.

The first 800MW unit of the 1.6GW Telangana thermal power project started commercial operations on 28 September and was added to group generation capacity, Bombay Stock Exchange-listed NTPC said. The unit completed trial operations in mid-September.

NTPC, India's largest power producer, in July started commercial operations at a second 660MW unit of the 1.98GW Barh thermal power project in the eastern state of Bihar.

NTPC is expanding thermal power capacity at a time when Indian private-sector utilities have largely stopped developing new coal-fired generation projects. Private-sector utilities, such as Tata Power and JSW Energy, have shifted from developing new thermal generation capacity to focusing entirely on renewables.

The company board recently approved investment of 155.3bn rupees ($1.87bn) to set up a 1.6GW coal-fired power project as part of its broader plans to reach 130GW capacity by 2030. The two additional units of 800MW each would be set up under the second phase at its 1.6GW Lara power project in India's Chhattisgarh state. The 1.6GW first phase of Lara was completed in July 2020.

The company is considering the development of 7GW of additional coal-based capacity as brownfield projects by 2030 to meet the country's increasing power demand, NTPC said in its recently released annual report for the 2022-23 fiscal year that ended on 31 March. It also aims to add 10GW of conventional power capacity over the next three years, together with 16GW of renewable capacity.

India will need to increase its coal-fired power generation capacity to 259.6GW by March 2032 from the current 211.9GW, according to the country's national electricity plan (NEP).

The NEP, announced by the Central Electricity Authority (CEA) in May, said India will need to raise its current coal-fired capacity to meet the country's projected peak electricity demand of 2,473.8TWh in 2031-32. The CEA also sees coal-fired capacity rising to 235.1GW by 2026-27.


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