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Power crisis: India faces a shortage of 17,000 MW

Windjammer

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Jul 03, 2012 at 03:14pm IST


Power crisis: India faces a shortage of 17,000 MW


New Delhi: It's peak summer in most parts of India. Demand for power is at a peak of 2,17,000 mega watt. Our power generation, however, is much less at 1,99,877 mega watt. Poor transmission and distribution makes it even worse.
Many cities such as Chennai, Bangalore and the capital itself, Delhi, have long power cuts.
Forty per cent of the country does not get electricity at all. About six lakh villages do not have any network to receive electricity.
CNN-IBN has learnt that around 30 power stations have just about a week's coal left to fuel the power plants.
Coal India which supplies coal to 80 per cent of India's power plants has a shortage of 142 million tonnes. The reason they say is lack of enviornmental clearances and land acquisition problems. However, coal shortage is not the only reason for the summer sweat.
KC Venugopal, MoS Power, says, "It is not remarkable. It does not have much significance. Only about 1-1.5 per cent generation is impacted due to coal shortage. We are planning for huge capacity addition in future. AT&C losses (aggregate technical and commercial losses) are there. Lack of transmission lines... Southern India is not connected to rest of the national grids."
Glitches in the electricity supply chain have made problems worse. Coal supply is not only short but expensive too for these power plants. Equipment at some power plants are old and faulty. Transmission systems are too old to take the required load. Distribution bottlenecks are equally stifling. This requires huge network of cables, conductors and transformers. Change in power tariffs is the need of the hour, power utilities are not putting more money in infrastructure development.
Ramesh Narayanan, Chief Executive Officer of the BSES Yamuna Power Ltd, says, "The main problem for the shortage is there is a lag in the distribution infrastructure development. The distribution infrastructure in the whole country has not kept pace with a development on the generation side. Even if you may have electricity available from the generators but the power does not reach the end consumer because the infrastructure for distributing that power is not given."
PMO's recent intervention pushing coal companies to sign supply agreements has shown no significance. In fact, the government is piling on problems by overlooking the worsening financial health of power distribution companies which are a vital part of power supply chain. It's high time the government worked on all levels of power generation to save the nation from a complete blackout soon
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Power crisis: India faces a shortage of 17,000 MW - India News - IBNLive
 
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Again Windjammer? Really??!!



Appreciate you concern but a non-issue really- India has one of the fastest growing power generation capacities on earth and by 2017-20 will meet 100% power needs.


+ I think you should focus on you own nation- that's where the real energy crisis is happening and isn't going to fixed for the foreseeable future.
 
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I am not seeing any major power cuts in cities, most cities has close to 24 hour power supply. We have also initiated many power projects which will start giving us power in coming years. The situation is only going to improve. Villages do have 2 to 4 hours power cut.
 
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Again Windjammer? Really??!!

If my memory stays with me, it's the first time i even touched the subject.

Appreciate you concern but a non-issue really- India has one of the fastest growing power generation capacities on earth and by 2017-20 will meet 100% power needs.
Some body, in fact you dear sir should inform the absent minded reporter for causing anxiety and not looking forward to 2020.
+ I think you should focus on you own nation- that's where the real energy crisis is happening and isn't going to fixed for the foreseeable future.

Believe me we have several Indian member reminding us by the hour.....you know with all the smileys and high waves.
However, we don't like to predict out of thin air but several options and projects are currently under way.
 
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luckily most of the power cuts here in Delhi are fragmented. That is, 10 min in the morning , 10 min in the evening . so they manage the situation quite efficientely, I should say, causing minimum problems.
The situation has improved quite a lot since the Tata's entered in the sector:tup:
 
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& their govt is thinking to sell electricity to Pakistan......

Many states neighbouring Pakistan run significant power supluses and it would be easier,geographically, to transfer power to Pakistan than a state on the other side of India.
 
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Guys let's discuss this without getting Pakistan into discussion. Energy crisis is real but it is not that bad in India.
 
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I am not seeing any major power cuts in cities, most cities has close to 24 hour power supply. We have also initiated many power projects which will start giving us power in coming years. The situation is only going to improve. Villages do have 2 to 4 hours power cut.

The tragedy is most people will believe what's been reported in Indian newspaper rather than an Indian posting from the States.
Anyway, what a lying Basanti the reporter is ...spreading false rumours. :angry:
Many cities such as Chennai, Bangalore and the capital itself, Delhi, have long power cuts.
Forty per cent of the country does not get electricity at all. About six lakh villages do not have any network to receive electricity.
 
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& their govt is thinking to sell electricity to Pakistan......

may be sometimes u should use ur brain...

some States bordering Pakistan produce surplus power. Selling it to states like Tamil nadu or Andhra Pradesh would be a loss due to transmission loss of power incurred due to such long distance. Instead sell the power to a state/country which is nearby.
 
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Many states neighbouring Pakistan run significant power supluses and it would be easier,geographically, to transfer power to Pakistan than a state on the other side of India.

thats difficult to understand for those people who havent been to physics and geography class
 
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The tragedy is most people will believe what's been reported in Indian newspaper rather than an Indian posting from the States.
Anyway, what a lying Basanti the reporter is ...spreading false rumours. :angry:

Like I said- address your own issues before you attack someone else, and that too someone with superior power generating capacity and major plans to fix all gaps in the very near future.


Do others post about the significantly worse power situation in Pakistan that shows no chance of be resolved anytime soon. Is hte situation there so bad but commonplace now there that no reporters even bother reporting this anymore?


Stones and glass houses, right??
 
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Jul 03, 2012 at 03:14pm IST


Power crisis: India faces a shortage of 17,000 MW


New Delhi: It's peak summer in most parts of India. Demand for power is at a peak of 2,17,000 mega watt. Our power generation, however, is much less at 1,99,877 mega watt. Poor transmission and distribution makes it even worse.
Many cities such as Chennai, Bangalore and the capital itself, Delhi, have long power cuts.
Forty per cent of the country does not get electricity at all. About six lakh villages do not have any network to receive electricity.
CNN-IBN has learnt that around 30 power stations have just about a week's coal left to fuel the power plants.
Coal India which supplies coal to 80 per cent of India's power plants has a shortage of 142 million tonnes. The reason they say is lack of enviornmental clearances and land acquisition problems. However, coal shortage is not the only reason for the summer sweat.
KC Venugopal, MoS Power, says, "It is not remarkable. It does not have much significance. Only about 1-1.5 per cent generation is impacted due to coal shortage. We are planning for huge capacity addition in future. AT&C losses (aggregate technical and commercial losses) are there. Lack of transmission lines... Southern India is not connected to rest of the national grids."
Glitches in the electricity supply chain have made problems worse. Coal supply is not only short but expensive too for these power plants. Equipment at some power plants are old and faulty. Transmission systems are too old to take the required load. Distribution bottlenecks are equally stifling. This requires huge network of cables, conductors and transformers. Change in power tariffs is the need of the hour, power utilities are not putting more money in infrastructure development.
Ramesh Narayanan, Chief Executive Officer of the BSES Yamuna Power Ltd, says, "The main problem for the shortage is there is a lag in the distribution infrastructure development. The distribution infrastructure in the whole country has not kept pace with a development on the generation side. Even if you may have electricity available from the generators but the power does not reach the end consumer because the infrastructure for distributing that power is not given."
PMO's recent intervention pushing coal companies to sign supply agreements has shown no significance. In fact, the government is piling on problems by overlooking the worsening financial health of power distribution companies which are a vital part of power supply chain. It's high time the government worked on all levels of power generation to save the nation from a complete blackout soon
.
Power crisis: India faces a shortage of 17,000 MW - India News - IBNLive

Bro its agreed in chennai we have power cuts,but that will be sorted out when kudamkulam power plant starts production ,then about power cuts in bangalore its a pure B.S.,anyway thank you for your concern could you also post Enormous power cuts in Pakistan too...lets see whether it reaches GOP or not....:hitwall:
 
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