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78%
39,222 MW
71% 90%
7,231 MW 9,755
Diesel Nuclear 1% 3%
RES Gas
Gas 10%
Nuclear Diesel Coal
Total installed capacity as on Hydro 29 July 2009 ASSOCHAM South Asia Renewable Energy Conference, New Delhi 31.3.2009 is 148265.4
th
Other RE Wind
Energy supply
Coal
Major energy source.
Biomass
Primary source of cooking energy in > 80% rural households.
Electricity
All India average shortage ~ 11.6 % Peak Load supply shortage ~ 15 % Base Load supply shortage ~ 9 %
Energy supply
Poor electrification status
78 million households (44%) in the country do not have access to electricity 1,25,000 villages are un-electrified Electricity supply situation is generally poor in even electrified villages
1300.00 1180.00
41110.00 21180.24
7% GDP growth
800000
8% GDP growth
600000
400000
200000
Billion Dollars
Potential being mapped by IMD, and few other institutes. IMD, MNRE has published solar energy resource handbook
Government initiatives
GBI (Generation Based incentives) for Solar power projects (2008) Solar Mission under National Action Plan for Climate Change GBIs and incentive schemes from state governments
Industry
Move fast to develop manufacturing capability Develop R & D base Appropriate technology adaptation
140
Per Capita Consumption (kWh)
700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005
120 100 80 60 40 20 0 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005
Year
Number of Villages Electrified
700,000 600,000 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 1940
Serious Growth after 60s Generation 6th largest in world Per capita consumption low Close to 95% villages electrified
(Projected)
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
2020
Source: Groningen Growth and Development Center Total Economy Database, http://www.ggdc.net/.
Growth Areas
Present growth is skills or resource driven (exports: software, gems and jewels, garment manufacture) Future Growth will have to be on value addition & engineering Rural sector to play a major role (agricultural and dairy produce; minimizing wastage and improving efficiency) Infrastructure building (roads, buildings, railroads etc.,) Manufacturing
10000
5000
0
1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014
Fuel
Present
In 2015
Coal
Gas Hydro Nuclear
67,166 MW
11,840 MW 30,135 MW 2,720 MW
?
? ? ?
Wind
On-shore Off-shore
Wind
Biomass Solar TOTAL
2,488 MW
1,000 MW 115,035 MW
?
? ? 250,000 MW
Biomass Solar
Photo voltaic Concentrating Solar Power
King Coal !
Reserves Proven 91 billion Tons Indicated 116 billion Tons Inferred 37 billion Tons TOTAL 245 billion Tons Coal reserves: > 250 years at present levels of consumption Concentrated in Eastern India
Others 13%
Madhya Pradesh 7%
Jharkhand 29%
(%)
3.25
Low energy content CO2 emissions > 1 kg per kWh Issues with coal:
Ash disposal: annual ash generation > 90 million tons CO2 emissions
Wyodak
11,960
5.97
0.40
WPC Utah
11,240
5.32
0.61
Indian Coal
6,500
25-45
<0.5
600
500
200
Issues:
Ash generation > 200 million Tons CO2 emissions > 850 Million Tons Particulate and NOx emissions (presently not regulated) Coal transportation bottleneck: Rail transportation stagnation
100
0
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
China
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
India and China presently not subject to mandatory cuts in CO2 However future may not be so
The question is: How much do we want to add with coal given the constraints of quality, transportation, carbon emissions and environmental issues.
Lower Case
~ 120 GW
470 MMT
690 MMT
Hydro-Electricity
Inferred potential > 120 GW Installed capacity 30 GW Most big projects are in NorthEastern states of Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Uttaranchal and J&K Problems of rehabilitation and resettlement with large projects Environmental issues Water sharing agreements with neighbors
National Hydro Power Corporation, Government of India
Hydro-Electric Potential
Details of projects under construction Ongoing and Planned Projects
Projects awaiting clearance and government approval Projects at DPR and infrastructure development stage Projects under survey and investigation 2,570 MW
Dulhasti Dhauliganga Stage - I * J&K Uttaranchal Sikkim Manipur Himachal Pradesh J&K Arunachal Pradesh West Bengal Madhya Pradesh State Capacity (MW) 390 140 510 90 800 120 2000 132 520 4702
11,620 MW
11,000 MW
Sewa-II Subansiri Lower Teesta Lower Dam-III
Omkareshwar TOTAL
Natural Gas
Fastest growing primary fuel, worldwide Indian statistics (2004-05):
Consumption: > 31 BCM/year Primary uses: Power 41% Fertilizer 32% Sponge Iron 4% Other 23% Growing needs for transportation (and some cooking) Latent demand estimated as high as 80 BCM (depends on price, of course)
Turkmenistan
1 1
CENTGAS - to Pakistan - onwards to India TAPS TAPS (across water) Gas supply
3 3 Oman Oman 4 4 Qatar Qatar
Afghanistan
Consumption center
1 1 Turkmenistan Turkmenistan 2 2 Iran Iran
Iran
Multan
Pakistan
2 2 4 4
Qatar
Gw adar
Karachi
India
Indore Indore
3 3
Baroda
Oman
Imports of Gas
LNG growing (5+ million tons/annum), but prices remain high
1 ton LNG can power ~ 1 GW of power 1 BCM gas ~ .8 GW of power thus, 20 BCM ~ 16,000 MW of gas power
Biomass
India predominantly agricultural country. Annual production of agro-forest and processing residues: 350 million tons Power generation potential > 22,000 MW Advantages:
Decentralized generation: close to rural load centers. Technology reasonably well developed Environmentally friendly: No net CO2 emissions
Feedstock Agro-forest residues Examples Wood chips, mulberry, coconut shells Rice husk, sugarcane bagasse Potential 17,000 MW Installed 50 MW
Processing residues
5,000 MW
1000 MW
Wind Energy
World Wind Installed Capacity (2005)
18,000
Gross potential
: 45,000 MW
Installed Capacity (MW)
Rapid growth in installed capacity from 1990s India ranks 5th in the world
Present installed capacity ~ 3000 MW
Germany
Denmark
Netherlands
China
India
Italy
Spain
UK
US
Japan
Denmark
In general, wind speeds lower (~200W/m2) in India as compared to Europe (350 W/m2) and US
US
UK
Denmark Denmark Sweden Germany Netherlands Germany Ireland
60 MW
23 MW 5 MW 10 MW 1040 MW 120 MW 240 MW 520 MW
48m
20 m 35m 6 10 m 30 m 20 24 m 20 m 25m
2.3 km
3.5 km 6 km 5 km 43 50 km 23 km 34 km 10 km
Completed
Completed Completed Completed Planned Planned Planned Partly complete
Europe and US have taken up several off-shore projects. Wind speeds higher Distance from shore in some cases ~ 30 40 km !
Depth (metres)
2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0
Distance (Km)
1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400
Distance (Km)
Distance (Km)
10000
8000
6000
4000
Presently installed
2000
0
1969 1973 1981 1984 1986 1991 1992 1993 1995 2000 2005 2006 2015
Why Cooperate?
India needs electric power now, more than ever, for human development and growth It must generate power from all energy sources Excessive and continued dependence on coal contributes to environmental degradation & global warming Limitations of renewable energy sources
Why Cooperate?
Politics of Non-Proliferation: Power & Responsibility R&D: cooperation and Collaboration Bilateral trade & economic issues Sharing global energy resources Environmental concerns Shared vision: secular, democratic & caring society
Why Cooperate?
Climate change is a greater threat to humanity than terrorism, and no less urgent. ---David King, Science Advisor to Prime
Minister of UK
An Action Plan
Until Nuclear Fusion and Hydrogen technologies mature Minimizing wastage; energy conservation; Development of Energy Plan Installation of nuclear power ( 34GW in 10 years) Investments in R&D to make renewable technologies efficient, sustainable &affordable
An Action Plan
Strict enforcement of export controls of technologies, equipment and services Nuclear power reactors under international safeguards Collaboration in developing technologies for utilizing MOX fuels for electric power generation Participation in Gen. 4 R&D initiatives
Hydro 15.96%
Nuclear 14.60%
Coal 60.44%
Coal 50.90%
Reduction in annual coal consumption ~ 100 Million Tons Reduction in annual CO2 Emissions > 170 Million Tons
~ Total present CO2 emissions of Netherlands !
What If.
India & China Were Developedby 2013?
Present Electricity Per Capita (kWh) Global Carbon Emissions (Million Tons per Year)
5000
US India China
2002 2013
4000
Target: 14,000 kWh by 2013 Expected Carbon Emission: 14,400 Million Tons (2.5 times present global emissions !!) CO2 concentration > 400 ppm Temperature rise > 0.5 C
(Calculations Based on Data in Climate Change 2001, IPCC)
3000
2000
1000
US India China
> 750 4 8
Million Barrels per Day
160
2003 2013
120
80
40
Can India be energy surplus in two years remember the green revolution?
Yes
Our strategies and focus can help India to: 1. Become an energy surplus state within two years with zero additional generation. 2. Earn a very large number of Carbon Points
Assuming we have 10 Million ACs in India; on account of stabilizers for ACs alone we lose around 4 million units, even during peak hours, which is double the power generated by many large generating stations.
Assuming an AC runs for 5 hours in a day, this means a loss of 20 million units per day.
Further, inverters use lead-acid batteries which severely pollute the environment.
Pilferage
Pilferage (Power theft) in India is responsible for the disappearance of 29% of electricity generated. In energy terms this amounts to 613.87 million units/day.
Simple Mathematics
Power Generation capacity: 1,26,000 MW Power available/day: 2116.80 MU Power consumed/day Transmission line: 84.67 MU Unavoidable distribution losses: 296.35 MU Pilferage: 613.87 MU Used by consumer (max.): 889.06 MU Wasted by consumer (min.): 232.85 MU
MU Million units/day
Stabilizer
Inverter/UPS Pumps Motors Others Pilferage
20%
50% 66% 60% 29%
10 Million
50 Million 11 Million 5 Million Total=>
20.00
12.50 116.16 48.00 36.19 613.87 846.72
2,190.00
1,368.75 12,719.52 5,256.00 3,962.81 67,218.77 92,715.85
Impact of wastage
At the national level all this wastage adds up to 850 Million units/day against a capacity of 2,116.8 Million Units/day.
The cost of setting up a 1000 MW power plant entails a capital cost of approx 5000 Cr. Considering a plant load factor of 0.7, it generates about 16.8 Million Units/day . Transmission cost is another about 3000 Cr.
Wastage of 16.8 Million Units/day, requires a capital outlay to the tune of Rs. 8,000 Cr. Wastage of 850 Million Units/day implies a wasteful capital blockage of over Rs. 4,00,000 Crores with a recurring daily loss of over Rs. 250 Cr. and an annual loss of over Rs. 90,000 Cr !
For the 10th Five year plan the capacity is to be enhanced by 34,000 MW.
Powerful energy management ideas can thus yield saving of over 40,000 MW (1MU/day translates to around 60MW) placing us years ahead in our march to energy availability, sufficiency and increased efficiency of natural resource management plus lower pollutions.
We can thus very comfortably realize the governments declared goal of total self sufficiency of power by year 2012, much earlier.
Our Commitment
Whereas we are capable of achieving savings of over 20,000 MW, we can help save 5,000 MW in the first instance, provided a commitment is made to: 1. Implement the solutions nation-wide 2. Take care of our interests, commensurate with the gains.