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India gears up for peak power demand in April

  • Spanish Market: Coal, Electricity, Natural gas
  • 10/03/23

The Indian power ministry is stepping up preparations, with India facing a peak power demand forecast of 229GW in April with the onset of summer.

Several states already witnessed record-high temperatures in February. The India Meteorological Department has indicated that summers months are likely to be hotter, predicting heat waves between March and May.

The government has invoked an emergency rule that enables some of the biggest coal-fired power plants to operate at full capacity. It has directed power utilities to carry out maintenance for coal-fired power plants in advance to avoid any maintenance shutdown during the crunch period.

All imported coal-fired power plants are to run at full capacity from 16 March as the power ministry aims to buy 1,500MW of coal-fired electricity capacity using imported coal to meet an anticipated deficit during the peak summer month. The government earlier this year ordered utilities to import 6pc of their thermal coal requirements for blending until September.

An additional capacity of 2.92GW of newly commissioned coal-fired power plants is likely to be operational by the end of March, besides two units with a coal-fired power capacity of 110MW each at Barauni in east India's Bihar state during the crunch period, according to a government notification on 9 March. The railway ministry is to provide 418 rakes and more to different subsidiaries of state-controlled Coal India (CIL), along with captive blocks to meet the coal required at plants.

Gas-fired power generation will also meet peak demand. State-controlled utility NTPC has been instructed to generate 5GW from its gas-fired power plants during April-May, in addition to 4GW of additional gas-fired power capacity that will be added by other entities.

State-controlled gas distributor Gail has already assured the power ministry that it will supply 248mn m³ of gas during the summer months.

But some in the market see a possible power shortage because of a hotter than usual summer this year.

"There is high probability of having a shortage of approximately 5GW during the month of April 2023 in the night-time peak demand hours wherein the requirement would be 216.9GW and the effective available capacity is expected to be 211.89GW," said associate vice-president of coal commercial strategy and regulatory affairs at Jindal Group Saunak Dey.

India's power consumption was 116.7TWh in February, up by 9pc from a year earlier, according to data from the power ministry. India's power consumption was 1,375.5TWh between April 2022 and February 2023.

Mumbai-based Crisil Market Intelligence and Analytics forecasts India's power consumption rising by 5.5-6pc in the April 2022-March 2023 fiscal year from over 1,320TWh a year earlier.

Available stocks

A total a 204GW of India's coal-fired thermal power plants had 33.85mn t of coal stocks left as on 7 March, which is sufficient for 12 days, data from the Central Electricity Authority showed.

To meet the rising summer demand, domestic coal requirements for April-June are expected to be 222mn t against anticipated supplies of 204.5mn t, Dey said, adding that the 6pc blending mandate will cover up the shortfall. But he also said that an approximate 1GW of coal-fired thermal generation capacity may also be forced to shut down in April.

A sharp rise in electricity consumption and tighter coal availability last year resulted in lengthy power cuts in parts of the country, prompting authorities to increase the supply of domestic coal to utilities. The Indian government also mandated CIL to import coal for the blending requirements of all domestic power utilities for the first time since 2015.

Coal accounted for 50pc of India's power generation feedstock in 2022. Gas' share was 6pc out of the 60bn m³ demand last year, the majority of which were for sectors including fertiliser and city gas.


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25/09/24

Hurricane Helene shuts in 29pc of US Gulf oil

Hurricane Helene shuts in 29pc of US Gulf oil

New York, 25 September (Argus) — Hurricane Helene, which is forecast to intensify as it heads for a late Thursday landfall in Florida, has shut in about 29pc of US Gulf of Mexico oil output. Around 511,000 b/d of US offshore oil output was off line as of 12:30pm ET, according to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE), while 313mn cf/d of natural gas production, or 17pc of the region's output, was also off line. Operators have so far evacuated workers from 17 offshore platforms. Helene was last about 110 miles north-northeast of Cozumel, Mexico, according to a 2pm ET advisory from the US National Hurricane Center, with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph. Helene is expected to be a major hurricane, with winds of at least 111mph, when it reaches the eastern Florida coast on Thursday evening. "A turn toward the north and north-northeast with an increase in forward speed is expected later today through Thursday, bringing the center of Helene across the eastern Gulf of Mexico and to the Florida Big Bend coast by Thursday evening," the center said. Shell restarting some production Although the hurricane will largely pass to the east of most offshore oil and gas production areas, companies have taken precautionary measures. Given a shift in the forecast track, Shell said late Tuesday that it had started to ramp up production at the Appomattox platform to normal levels, and was in the process of restoring output at the Stones facility, both off the coast of Louisiana. It paused some drilling operations. Chevron said earlier it was shutting in production at company-operated facilities in the Gulf of Mexico, and evacuating all workers. Equinor said it was shutting down the Titan oil platform. BP had earlier this week started to shut in production at its Na Kika and Thunder Horse platforms, southeast of New Orleans, and was curtailing output from its Argos and Atlantis facilities, as well as removing non-essential staff. US offshore production was disrupted earlier this month when Hurricane Francine made landfall, with up to 42pc of production was offline at one point. The offshore Gulf of Mexico accounts for around 15pc of total US crude output and 5pc of US natural gas production. By Stephen Cunningham Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

LNG glut coming and may catch many by surprise: Orsted


25/09/24
25/09/24

LNG glut coming and may catch many by surprise: Orsted

London, 25 September (Argus) — There will be an oversupply of LNG on the global market in the coming years, which may contribute further to "the decade of turmoil", Danish utility Orsted senior vice-president Rune Sonne Bundgaard-Jorgensen told Argus . "The [energy] crisis is absolutely not over. To me, an energy crisis is one of uncertainty and volatility," Bundgaard-Jorgensen said on the sidelines of the Energy Trading Week conference in London. "We are going to see an LNG glut which we all in this [conference] room see is coming but the rest of the world does not necessarily. That is going to catch a lot of people by surprise," he said, adding that "surprises are never good when it comes to energy". According to Bundgaard-Jorgensen, "we are going to see an ongoing decade of turmoil. Who knows where the war in the Middle East with the latest attacks on Hezbollah and Israel is going to take us," he said. Among other concerns, he mentioned "uncertainties in the Far East, around the South China Sea". "So, though the current energy crisis of decoupling from Russian pipe gas is over, the continued crisis of where we are going to get sustainable, long-term energy from is far from over," Bundgaard-Jorgensen said. Commenting on Orsted's long-term gas plans, Bundgaard-Jorgensen stressed that Orsted is "constantly evaluating" its gas portfolio. He refused to say whether Orsted is negotiating another long-term deal with Norwegian state-controlled Equinor after their previous contract expired in April. Orsted entered an agreement with Equinor at the end of 2022, after Russian state-controlled Gazprom halted deliveries to the firm from June 2022 following Orsted's refusal to pay for its supply in roubles . "We are quite happy that we are out of our long-term contract with Gazprom," Bundgaard-Jorgensen said. "As a company we believe in decarbonisation — but I also need to believe in a resilient portfolio. So, we are constantly looking to optimise. Gas is not a strategic core of Orsted but it is a very important tool of securing our portfolio," he said. Bundgaard-Jorgensen refused to comment on whether the firm is planning to appeal a decision made by the Danish Supply Authority in July that the tariff levied by Orsted on the Tyra-Nybro pipeline to Denmark from 2011 to October 2012 was too high. The authority reduced the tariff in the period by almost 30pc to 7.20 Danish kroner/m³ from DKr10/m³. By Alexandra Vladimirova Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Vietnam’s Vinacomin to boost coal imports


25/09/24
25/09/24

Vietnam’s Vinacomin to boost coal imports

Singapore, 25 September (Argus) — Vietnamese coal producer Vietnam National Coal and Mineral Industries (Vinacomin) plans to more than double its thermal coal imports over the next six years to meet an anticipated growth in demand. The state-owned company, which meets most of Vietnam's coal requirements, aims to lift imports to 12.6mn t this year and to 14.5mn t in 2025, and increase its receipts of seaborne thermal coal to 22mn t in 2030, a senior official from the firm told Argus on 25 September. It imported 9.2mn t of coal in 2023. The move to raise imports comes as Vinacomin wants to raise its blended coal supplies to utilities, because it is the key supplier to local coal-fired power plants. Vinacomin typically blends its domestic coal with imported thermal coal to meet utility requirements as anthracite accounts for most of the locally produced coal, and is not preferred by plants for direct use given its low volatile matter content. Vinacomin is also a key supplier of coal to industries such as steel and cement. The coal import plans support Vietnam's overall coal import outlook at a time when the country's seaborne coal receipts are set to reach an all-time high in 2024. Vietnam has imported 45.86mn t of all types of coal in the first eight months of the year, up by about 33pc from a year earlier, according to its customs data . The country could end up importing close to 69mn t of coal this year at the current average rate of 5.73mn t/month, according to Argus calculations, marking Vietnam's highest annual imports since the 55mn t of coal it received in 2020. The imports could reach about 73mn t by 2030 and rise further to peak at around 85mn t in 2035 , according to the government's latest national energy master plan released last year. Vinacomin's strategy to grow imports also comes as Vietnam's domestic coal output has remained rangebound and sluggish. Vinacomin has set a target to produce 37.4mn t this year, up from 36.8mn t it produced last year. Domestic coal output growth faces challenges as there is no near-term plan to explore the Red River delta, which accounts for nearly 86pc of Vietnam's total coal reserves of 48.9bn t. Coal mining in the belt could be ecologically sensitive as the bulk of the land is used for agriculture, while coal projects in the region could also be economically unviable. Vinacomin in 2024 is seeking imported coal with calorific value of NAR 4,800-5800 kcal/kg coal of low and mid-volatile matter coal, with typical sulphur content of 0.6pc to aid its blending efforts, the official said. Vinacomin buys the bulk of the coal via tenders and it refers to international coal indices including Argus' ICI index for Indonesian coal as well as the API index for non-Indonesian coal. By Saurabh Chaturvedi Vinacomin's thermal coal import plan (mn t) Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Helene shuts in about 16pc of US Gulf oil: Update 2


24/09/24
24/09/24

Helene shuts in about 16pc of US Gulf oil: Update 2

Adds daily spot market crude pricing information. New York, 24 September (Argus) — Tropical storm Helene, which is expected to develop into a hurricane on Wednesday before coming ashore in Florida Thursday, has shut in about 16pc of US Gulf of Mexico oil output. Around 284,000 b/d of US offshore oil output was off line as of 12:30pm ET, according to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE), while 208mn cf/d of natural gas production, or 11pc of the region's output, was also off line. Operators have so far evacuated workers from four offshore production platforms. Helene was last about 175 miles east-southeast of Cozumel, Mexico, according to a 2pm ET advisory from the US National Hurricane Center, with maximum sustained winds of 45 mph. The current forecast has the center of Helene entering the eastern Gulf of Mexico Wednesday morning and moving north-northeast toward a possible landfall near the Florida panhandle region late Thursday. By then it will have strengthened into a major hurricane, with winds of at least 111mph, according to forecasts. While the storm will largely pass to the east of most offshore oil and gas production areas, companies started suspended some operations on Sunday. Chevron began evacuating workers and shutting in its Blind Faith and Petronius platforms. "While we are also transporting nonessential personnel from our four other Chevron-operated Gulf of Mexico platforms, production there remains at normal levels," the company said. Shell said Monday it had shut in output from its Stones facility and curtailed production from the Appomattox platform, both off the coast of Louisiana. The company was also relocating non-essential workers from its assets in the Mars corridor, and suspending some drilling operations. Equinor said it was shutting down the Titan oil platform as a precaution. BP had started to shut in production at its Na Kika and Thunder Horse platforms, southeast of New Orleans, and was curtailing output from its Argos and Atlantis facilities, as well as removing non-essential staff. Offshore spot prices rise slightly The Na Kika platform is connected by pipeline to the Shell-operated Delta pipeline system, which carries Heavy Louisiana Sweet (HLS) crude to shore. During trading on Tuesday, October HLS rose by 20¢/bl relative to the light sweet crude benchmark in Cushing, Oklahoma, to an 80¢/bl discount. The October US pipeline trade month ends Wednesday. The Thunder Horse platform production is marketed as part of a sour crude stream by the same name that is priced at the Louisiana Offshore Oil Pipeline's (LOOP) facility in Clovelly, Louisiana, where it has dedicated underground cavern storage, as does Mars. On Tuesday, Thunder Horse traded at a 50¢/bl discount to the Cushing benchmark, after wide discussion circled a 40¢/bl discount in the prior session. Medium sour secondary benchmark Mars tightened its gap to the Cushing basis by 30¢/bl to a volume-weighted average discount of roughly $1.55/bl. Crude production from the 140,000 b/d capacity Argos platform feeds into the Cameron Highway Oil Pipeline System (CHOPS), which carries Southern Green Canyon (SGC) crude to the Texas Gulf coast. Argos platform serves the Mad Dog 2 field development that came online last year. Atlantis production also feeds into SGC. No SGC transactions were reported on Tuesday. It was offered as low as $1/bl under the Cushing benchmark, lower than trade at a 50¢/bl discount in the prior session. US offshore production was disrupted earlier this month when Hurricane Francine made landfall as a category 1 storm. Up to 42pc of production was offline at one point. The offshore Gulf of Mexico accounts for around 15pc of total US crude output and 5pc of US natural gas production. By Stephen Cunningham Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Leaders call for fast-tracking renewable projects


24/09/24
24/09/24

Leaders call for fast-tracking renewable projects

New York, 24 September (Argus) — Countries need to fast track permitting processes for renewable projects and build more transmission infrastructure to meet the goal of tripling global renewable capacity by 2030, leaders said at the Global Renewables summit today. At the UN's Cop 28 climate summit in Dubai last year, countries agreed to take action to triple global renewable energy capacity from 2022 levels by 2030 and to double energy efficiency. Almost a year later, there are major barriers that are impeding investment needed to boost a faster expansion of renewables. "We must double down on implementation," European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said at the event in New York, New York. Permitting has become a major barrier for developers to build their renewable and transmissions projects within the timeframes originally set, leading to delays and rising costs. This is turn creates uncertainty for investors interested in providing funds for the development of projects and expecting returns, speakers said. Countries' nationally determined contributions (NDCs) to reduce greenhouse emissions not only need to show their renewable capacity targets but also their electricity grid goals that allow the flow of renewable electricity and accelerate the growth of renewable capacity, Cop 28's president Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber said. Sorting out these bottlenecks with the proper regulations and policies will create certainty for investors and attract more project financing, leaders agreed. This year's Cop 29 will focus on speeding the delivery of goals set at Cop 28 as well as expanding and adding new solutions for the integration of renewables. Cop 29 president-designate from Azerbaijan Mukhtar Babayev said that they hope countries back a pledge to increase global energy storage capacity to 1.5GW by 2030 and to add or refurbish more than 80mn km (49mn miles) of electricity grids by 2040. By Jacqueline Echevarria Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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