India power minister promotes renewables and ‘cleaner’ coal

May 24, 2017, 4:46 pm | Admin

MAY 23, 2017 by: Andrew Ward, Energy Editor

Piyush Goyal picks up his smartphone, opens an app and declares the precise number of villages in India without reliable access to electricity: 4,061.

When he became Indian minister for power in 2014, he says, the number was over 18,000. Mr Goyal is aiming for the whole country to have round-the-clock access to electricity by 2019 — three years ahead of an official government timetable.

“My prime minister is focused on speed and scale,” he says in an interview, referring to Indian leader Narendra Modi. “He doesn’t like small targets.”

For anyone concerned with raising living standards in the world’s second most populous nation, this rapid progress in tackling Indian energy poverty is an indisputably good thing. But it begs an important question with implications for global efforts to tackle climate change: where is the extra electricity coming from?

Until recently, the answer was overwhelmingly coal, which accounts for about 60 per cent of Indian power generation. Coal capacity has almost tripled in the past decade to 192GW and a further 65GW is under construction.

The fastest growth, however, is coming from renewables. Significant amounts of hydro and wind generation have already pushed the share of green energy to about 30 per cent. This is now being supplemented by rapid expansion in solar power.

A landmark was reached this May when an auction to supply 500MW of new solar capacity at a 10,000 hectare facility on the edge of the Thar desert secured a record low price of Rs2.44 ($0.04) per kilowatt-hour — down two-thirds from three years ago and, for the first time, cheaper than coal-fired generation.

Plummeting costs have spurred forecasts that Indian solar capacity could double this year to 18GW, which would be more than six times greater than when Mr Modi’s government took power three years ago.

Mr Goyal says the solar surge demonstrates Indian commitment to curbing growth in its carbon emissions under the Paris climate agreement, regardless of whether President Donald Trump carries out his threat to withdraw the US from the deal.

“We’re fully committed . . . irrespective of what anyone else does,” he says. “It’s prime minister Modi’s commitment and his government’s commitment — not because someone else is telling us to do it but because we believe in it.”

India is planning to install 225GW of renewables by 2022. This puts the country on course for green energy to account for as much as 57 per cent of electricity capacity by 2027, well ahead of its Paris target of 40 per cent by 2030.

Mr Goyal plans a big push for electric vehicles and battery storage as a way to tackle not only carbon emissions but also severe air pollution in Indian cities.

Although not official government policy, he has declared that he wants all new cars sold in India in 2030 to be electric.

“Not even 15-20 per cent of the cars that will be on the road in 2030 have been sold today,” he says. “We’re going to have first-time vehicle owners in huge numbers. Imagine if those first-time owners can get electric cars which are cheaper to operate than a petrol car.”

As well as the environmental benefits, Mr Goyal sees an industrial opportunity. “I’m not going to wait for America or Britain to go electric,” he says. “We will lead the world . . . I want India to be a manufacturing base for batteries. You can get volumes [in India] that you don’t get anywhere else.”

https://www.ft.com/content/a106c468-3567-11e7-99bd-13beb0903fa3

Terakhir di update pada Selasa, 06 Juni 2017 / 16:52 WIB | 3746