PSE power plants resume coal imports

Resumption spurred by domestic shortages in a setback to India’s long-term plan to eliminate imports

May 17, 2018 09:21 pm | Updated 09:54 pm IST - NEW DELHI

Burden to bear:  Logistic bottlenecks, regulatory changes and rising power demand may spur thermal coal imports .

Burden to bear: Logistic bottlenecks, regulatory changes and rising power demand may spur thermal coal imports .

State-run thermal power plants in India’s coastal States have again begun buying overseas coal due to domestic coal shortages, government and utility officials said, in a setback for the country’s long-term plans to eliminate imports.

After no significant imports in 2017, government utilities in the States of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh have ordered several cargoes of coal since the beginning of this year, two officials said.

‘Real problem’

Andhra Pradesh has imported 2,00,000 tonnes of coal so far this year and could import as much as 1 million tonnes in 2018, said Ajay Jain, a senior official in the state energy department.

“Coal has been a real problem. If we had depended only on coal, it would have been a disaster,” he said.

Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corp. has imported about 1.4 million tonnes of coal this year, after going a year without imports starting at the end of 2016, according to Vikram Kapoor, the chairman of the utility.

An increase in coal imports by state-owned power utilities undermines a pledge by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to cut thermal coal imports to zero by March 2018.

Train shortage woes

But state-owned Coal India Ltd., the world’s second-biggest coal miner by production, is grappling with a shortage of trains to carry the fuel from its mines to the country’s power plants.

Both Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu are waiting for the wind energy season to start in June, when they expect dependence on coal to ease, Mr. Jain and Mr. Kapoor both said.

Domestic logistic bottlenecks, regulatory changes and surging power demand will likely increase 2018 thermal coal imports after two years of declines, Reuters reported in February. Imports rose over 15% in the first quarter of 2018. State-run utilities could add up to 5 million tonnes to India’s coal imports in 2018 because of the Coal India shortages, a senior executive from Adani Enterprises, India’s biggest coal trader, had said in February. India imported 144.5 million tonnes of coal in 2017, according to data from American Fuels & Natural Resources, a Dubai-based coal trader. Imports would be a boost for international miners such as Indonesia’s Adaro Energy, Australia’s Whitehaven Coal or commodity merchant Glencore.

Maharashtra has floated a tender to procure 1 million tonnes of coal to augment its existing stock, a senior official at Maharashtra State Power Generation Co. said.

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