In 2018, 80% of India’s total energy lending went to renewables. Coal got the rest, a major fall compared to 2017. No wonder, given coal plants have been running at below 60% utilisation for two years with the operators suffering huge losses. Renewables are now undercutting coal and getting cheaper. And shortages in water – needed for plant cooling – just add to their woes. Vibhuti Garg at IEEFA catalogues the problems, then describes the solutions – many already understood by government ministries. Those solutions switch emphasis away from total capacity additions and on to efficiency and optimum generation mix. That implies stalling coal, support for renewables growth, grid and transmission upgrades, storage, demand side management, and stronger price signals to incentivise peaking power supply. Investors have noticed the new world being created, and so too has the Indian government. Time for action.
The Indian power sector is under huge stress and struggling with issues across the value chain. This includes thermal generation exposed to a huge non-performing asset (NPA) burden of over INR 10 trillion (USD 144 billion) as of FY2018; an inadequate transmission network leading to grid congestion and curtailment; and increasing indebtedness and the deteriorating financial health of distribution companies (“discoms”).
Support for the under-recovery of discoms selling electricity at below-market prices, usually for residential and agricultural users, was the single largest source of energy subsidy expenditure in FY2017: INR 74,925 crore (USD 11.2 billion).
Thermal plants: over-capacity, big losses
In particular, thermal power plant developers are under huge pressure. Capacity utilisation rates have been below 60% over the past two years, combined with excessive financial leverage that makes debt servicing extremely difficult. Further, late payments by loss-making discoms and renegotiation of tariffs on power purchase agreements (PPAs) have added to the woes of developers, resulting in a double whammy that is clogging up the banking and power sectors alike. Currently, discoms’ dues in the renewable sector alone amounts to INR 9,735 crore (USD 1.36 billion).
India’s coal-fired energy sector is facing increasing pressure due to generator over-capacity, water shortages and the rise of low-cost renewables, according to a report by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) and the Applied Economics Clinic (AEC).
…“Cooling water” shortages, cheaper renewables
The report recognises the boom in coal plant construction during the early 2010s, resulting in significant over-capacity. The issue of declining water supply is also crippling the sector. At the same time, renewables are already cost effective, and the cost difference between renewables and coal will widen as time goes on.
The report recommends that India should adopt a policy of no net new coal-fired power generation beyond what is already under construction, and such plants should also be reviewed for possible cancellation.
This recommendation is consistent with a recent Central Electricity Authority (CEA) study that estimates the optimal generation capacity mix under various technology scenarios, including the issue of intermittency associated with renewable energy sources and other constraints, to meet electricity demand in FY29/30. According to the CEA, installed capacity and the generation mix is changing, and the optimal mix will be for thermal capacity to decline, while the share of renewable energy increases.
The five-year vision document recently prepared by the Ministry of Power and the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy for reforming the country’s power sector is also in sync with the above studies.
Targets: more renewables, efficiency, optimised mix
With falling plant load factor (PLF) and stressed assets, the document suggests shifting away from generation towards efficient supply and optimum generation mix. Further, the document stresses that capacity allocation of transmission infrastructure should be aligned with growth in renewable energy projects. It also talks about facilitating lending to the renewable energy sector.
The tide is changing and India is witnessing a transition in energy investment, with renewable energy attracting more private capital compared to fossil fuels.
Investment: coal plummets to 20%, renewables get 80%
A recent study by the Centre for Financial Accountability (CFA) analysing 54 energy projects for coal power and renewable energy in 2018, found that 80% of the total lending of INR 30,534 crore (USD 4.4 billion) was attributed to renewable energy projects. Coal-fired power projects received a meagre 20% of total lending, with primary finance to coal power shrinking by 93% compared to its 2017 value.
In 2018, most coal-fired project loans came from majority-government and government-owned financial institutions. Majority-privately-owned commercial banks contributed 75% of all finance towards renewable energy projects.
These studies indicate growing consensus that coal is losing its charm in India.
In such a scenario, is it a smart move for India to open commercial coal mining to 100% foreign direct investment (FDI)? Global trends indicate that global capital is fleeing coal. Over 100 globally significant financial institutions have divested from thermal coal, including 40% of the top 40 global banks and 20 globally significant insurers. In this context, it could be challenging to attract foreign investment to a declining sector when India’s economic growth is slowing, and global investors are shying away from the dirtiest fossil fuel.
Support for renewables growth
The government should channel its resources to a greater off-take of renewable energy in India. This would in turn require grid strengthening, improved interstate transmission capacity, and ideally a stronger price signal to incentivise peaking power supply to reward fast ramping and on-demand peak supply. India also needs additional storage and demand side measures to supplement the increasing share of renewable energy into the grid.
India will then be able to address the issue of air pollution, adverse impacts on health and quality, and the reliable supply of energy effectively, while avoiding climate disaster.
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Vibhuti Garg is an energy economist with IEEFA, and a senior energy specialist with the International Institute for Sustainable Development
This article is published with permission