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India renewable energy transition aims to cut coal dependence, boost efficiency with supercritical boilers, and scale solar, wind, and biomass, aligning with climate goals, lower carbon intensity, energy security, and 8-9 percent GDP growth.
The Big Picture
A strategy to boost coal plant efficiency and scale renewables to meet climate goals and strengthen energy security.
- Targets 8-9% GDP growth while cutting emissions intensity.
- Upgrades coal plants with supercritical boiler technology.
- Scales solar, wind, and biomass with global finance and tech.
- Aims 20-25% carbon intensity reduction from 2005 by 2020.
- Enhances energy security with lower coal use and imports.
Worries over energy security will drive India's goal to slow the growth of its carbon emissions, the head of a government panel tasked with developing the country's low-carbon strategy said.
Reserves of fossil fuels such as coal were fast running out, making it imperative for India to improve efficiency and accelerate renewable energy sources to keep the economy growing at a projected 8 to 9 percent annually, Kirit Parikh said.
India, the world's fourth-largest carbon emitter, is under pressure to curb energy use and cut pollution in the fight against climate change. While per-capita emissions are still low, demand for electricity and fossil fuels is increasing as the middle class clamors for more cars, TVs and better housing.
"If the Indian economy is not concerned at all with climate change... and follows the business-as-usual path, the reality is even in business-as-usual we have to change from what we are today," Parikh told Reuters in an interview.
"These are your imperatives in any way from your energy security point of view because we are very short of oil, very short of gas.
"We need to find in the next 20, at the most 30 years, an alternative to coal-based power plants. That will be required in a business-as-usual scenario."
In India, any talk of a low-carbon economy was once seen as politically very risky, with leaders often rejecting emission cuts on equity grounds, given the economic costs involved. But Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in January asked Parikh to begin charting a path to a greener economy.
The panel's preliminary report is due next month and the final submission in September.
Although India has announced a new climate plan which identifies renewable energy, such as solar power, as a key element, coal remains the backbone of energy supply, and some argue that cheap coal can help end widespread energy poverty, in a country where almost half the 1.1 billion population has no access to electricity.
The country has 10 percent of the world's coal reserves, the biggest after the United States, Russia and China. Most of India's coal is inferior in quality and, as air pollution data show, highly polluting.
About 70 million tons of coal is imported each year, mostly for making steel.
India plans to add 78.7 gigawatts of power generation during the five years ending March 2012, most of it from coal, which now accounts for about 60 percent of the nation's energy mix, even as the power sector pushes CO2 emissions across the country.
By comparison, renewables such as wind, solar and biomass contribute only 8.8 percent to generation and, though there are plans to scale up solar power generation to 20 gigawatts by 2022, it depends on international finance and technology.
A landmark nuclear deal with the United States might herald a new chapter in clean energy in India, but long planning and building periods for nuclear reactors and high cost are deterrents.
Parikh said given the dependence on coal, the only way forward was to enhance the efficiency of coal-based power plants by using technology such as super-critical boilers which would help cut coal use by about 20 percent.
"In 10 years' time, half of my plants should be more efficient. In another 10 years, 75 percent of the plants should be more efficient," he said.
India last year set a goal for slowing the growth of its emissions, saying it will try to rein in its "carbon intensity" — the amount of carbon dioxide emitted per unit of economic output — by between 20 and 25 percent by 2020, and has also seen 30% reduction aims discussed in some forums, from 2005 levels.
Parikh said the target was achievable without a major shift in policy keeping in view the fact that India's energy intensity — the amount of energy used to produce one unit of GDP — has been coming down.
He said it was too early to estimate the economic cost of shifting to a low-carbon economy and the panel would initially only identify areas of opportunities such as in the power, transport and construction sectors.
Parikh said increasing energy efficiency was not enough because enhanced efficiency would lead to higher energy demands.
"... activities become more productive, larger value-adding takes place, incomes go up, people demand more, growth takes place and the total energy demand goes up," he said.
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