by Lorraine Chow
The rapid growth in renewable energy continues
to put a dent in the demand for coal.
Coal India, the world's
biggest coal mining company and producer of 82 percent of the country's coal,
announced the closure of 37 mines that are financially "unviable."
The sites make up roughly nine
percent of the total mines operated by Coal India. The company is expected save
Rs 800 crore ($124 million) from the closures.
India's energy market is undergoing
a rapid transformation as it moves away from fossil fuels. Last month, the
country cancelled plans to build nearly 14 gigawatts of coal-fired power
stations.
Notably, solar has been
cheaper than coal-based electricity in India for the past several months.
According to Quartz:
"At an auction for 500
megawatt (MW) of capacity at the park on May 12, the state-run Solar Energy
Corporation of India (SECI) managed
to discover a record-low tariff of Rs 2.44 per kilowatt-hour (kWh). The
previous low was two days before that when tariffs hit Rs 2.62 per kWh during auctions for another
phase of Bhadla solar park.
"The country's largest
power company, NTPC, sells electricity from its coal-based generation units at a princely Rs 3.20 per
kWh."
The National Thermal Power
Corporation of India said that the country currently hosts a solar power
capacity of 845 megawatts, after the recent addition of a 225 megawatt solar
farm, the Mandsaur Solar Power Project.
"India's solar sector has
received heavy international investment, and the plummeting price of solar
electricity has increased pressure on fossil fuel companies in the
country," as The Independent reported. "The government has
announced it will not build any more coal plants after 2022 and predicts
renewables will generate 57 percent of its power by 2027—a pledge far
outstripping its commitment in the Paris climate change
agreement."
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