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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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14/04/25

Funding cuts could delay US river lock work: Correction

Funding cuts could delay US river lock work: Correction

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IMO GHG pricing not yet Paris deal-aligned: EU


14/04/25
14/04/25

IMO GHG pricing not yet Paris deal-aligned: EU

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Shale patch on edge after tariff drama


14/04/25
14/04/25

Shale patch on edge after tariff drama

New York, 14 April (Argus) — US president Donald Trump's back and forth over tariffs that sent oil prices tumbling to a four-year low last week has sparked jitters across the shale patch, although most producers are likely to take their time to respond. The oil and gas industry, one of Trump's biggest cheerleaders and donors during his election campaign, has been taken aback by the speed and scale of the president's escalating trade wars and executives are signalling growing impatience. Meanwhile, Trump's "Drill, baby, drill" mantra is even less likely to become a reality now, after oil slid below the $65/bl level that executives surveyed by the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank last month warned was needed to profitably sink a new well. Trump's imposition of punitive tariffs on nearly every major US trading partner led to a sell-off in stock, bonds and commodity markets until he announced a 90-day pause for most nations — except China — on 9 April. While it may be too early for talk about dropping rigs and curtailing production, companies will face tough questions from analysts about their contingency plans when first-quarter results start coming through later this month. One key difference from previous downturns in 2014 and 2020 is that exploration and production (E&P) firms are in a better position this time, with less debt on their balance sheets and more modest growth plans, which may help limit the initial fallout. But higher costs owing to tariffs on steel imports could offset the efficiency savings that have kept production going in an era of restrained spending. "E&Ps are likely to mostly take a wait-and-see approach — with a high level of uncertainty about future policy — and not prematurely lay down rigs," consultancy Enverus principal analyst Andrew Dittmar says. "If prices are weak headed into 2026, that is where you are likely to see a more material reduction in drilling budgets. Feeling dominated The shale industry has welcomed Trump's "energy dominance" agenda and his promise of a permitting overhaul. But cracks are appearing in that relationship because of his stop-start policy on tariffs. "This administration better have a plan," Diamondback Energy president Kaes Van't Hof said in a social media post, in a direct appeal to energy secretary Chris Wright. Shale is the "only industry that actually built itself in the US, manufactures in the US, grew jobs in the US and improved the trade deficit — and by proxy GDP — in the US over the past decade", Van't Hof, who is due to become Diamondback chief executive later this year, said. His company became the largest pure-play producer in the prolific Permian basin of west Texas and southeast New Mexico following its $26bn takeover of Endeavor Energy Resources last year. While few public producers were planning any kind of meaningful growth this year as higher dividends and buy-backs continue to be the priority, even that could eventually find itself on the chopping block. "The corporate reality for public players means that already modest growth could be at risk if prices remain near $60/bl," Rystad Energy vice-president for North American oil and gas Matthew Bernstein says. Little in the way of growth was forecast outside the core Permian this year even before Trump rolled out his tariffs. A prolonged period of lower prices could spur a downturn in the top-performing US basin. A combination of short-term activity levels, investor distributions and production could be sacrificed in order to defend margins, according to Rystad. And producers in the Delaware sub-basin could be especially vulnerable, given the region's steep initial decline rates, high well costs and large capital return requirements, the consultancy says. By Stephen Cunningham WTI breakeven price Nymex WTI futures month 1 Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Japan’s Renova boosts renewable power sales in March


14/04/25
14/04/25

Japan’s Renova boosts renewable power sales in March

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Треть заявок направлением на запад не обеспечены грузом


14/04/25
14/04/25

Треть заявок направлением на запад не обеспечены грузом

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