India's power ministry has extended its directive requiring imported coal-fired utilities to boost generation by two months until 30 April, potentially lifting seaborne coal demand, according to a government order released on 28 February.
The directive covers 15 imported coal-fired plants with a combined capacity of 17.5GW and was previously set to expire on 28 February.
India's power demand is expected to increase because of a seasonal uptick in the summer months starting in March. The ministry extended the directive under section 11 of the Indian electricity act, which allows authorities to issue orders to utilities to raise generation for the purpose of meeting power demand.
Delhi has been proactively directing utilities to boost output since mid-2022 to cater for seasonal surges in power demand. This has partly supported India's coal imports in recent years, but import growth the been limited on the back of a steady uptick in domestic output.
The country imported 12.85mn t of thermal coal in January, down by 1pc from a year earlier, but up by over 12pc on the month compared with December 2024, according to data from shipbroker Interocean. Imports reached 165.24mn t in 2024, down from 171.52mn t in 2023, marking the first annual decline since 2021, the data show.
Imported coal-based power plants received 3.37mn t of coal in January, down by 12pc from the year earlier, according to data from India's Central Electricity Authority (CEA).
India's coal-fired generation — which meets most of its power requirements — stood at 109.68TWh in January, down from 111.72TWh a year earlier but up from 104.30TWh in December 2024, CEA data show.
The latest order could be part of Delhi's plans to ensure steady power supply to meet summer demand. Temperatures in most parts of the country are expected to surge in the coming weeks, boosting power demand for air-conditioning.