India on the brink of blackout: Experts fear massive power cut to rival August 2012 grid collapse that left 600 MILLION without electricity
Of the 100 power plants monitored by the Central Electricity Authority (CEA), as many as 38 are left with only a week's worth of coal to burn, while 20 have as little as four or even zero days of coal stocks
In the northern region which comprises
power stations at Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal
Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Rajasthan, six power stations have less than
seven days of coal stock left, and three have less than four days of the
fuel.
There are a total of 26 power stations in the region.
The
situation is as dangerous in the western states of Gujarat and
Maharashtra and in the central states of Madhya Pradesh and
Chhattisgarh. As many as 16 power plants in these states have less than a
week's stock of coal, while 10 plants are left with less than four days
of stock.
As many as nine power
stations in the southern region - Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka
and Kerala - have reported less than seven days of fuel stock, of which
three have less than 4 days of stock
A senior
National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) official told "Currently, six of our coal-based projects, including two that supply
power to the national capital, are critically short of coal. The reserve
coal available at these projects is just for one day or even less."
The officer said that 23 of NTPC's coal-based projects are running at full capacity but do not have adequate coal reserves.
Heat derived from burning coal is used to produce steam that moves turbines to produce electricity.
Most
coal-based power plants keep at least a week's worth of coal in
reserve. NTPC projects generate around 36,000 MW of power, which is sold
for Rs 2.90 per unit to power distribution companies.
NTPC also has seven gas and solar-based power units, which have a power-generating capacity of 4,000 MW.
An
acute shortage of gas, however, means that the NTPC's gas-based
projects presently run at half capacity, generating only 2,000 MW of
power
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