India
KITEX allowed to sell wind power to Kerala for 20 years
KITEX Limited has been allowed to sell power from its two wind energy plants to the Kerala State Electricity Board.
KITEX allowed to sell wind power to Kerala for 20 years
KITEX Limited has been allowed to sell power from its two wind energy plants to the Kerala State Electricity Board.
Indian power projects to be hit by imminent coal shortage
Projects will have to resort to imported materials and the projected the debt service coverage will probably cost INR4.41/kwh.
Rajasthan raises tariff for newly-commissioned wind plants
Rajasthan has raised the tariff for wind power plants commissioned during fiscal years 2010-11 and 2011-12.
Electrification now reaches 91% of Indian villages
According to India's Central Electricity Authority, a total of 5,40,469 villages have been electrified as part of the ongoing rural electrification programme in the country.
India's transmission sector puts up credible show in November
India's transmission sector has shown a credible performance, achieving much more than the targeted stringing of transmission lines, for the month of November, this year.
Energy high on Indian PM’s agenda in Russia
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Thursday said India would enhance ties in a host of areas such as energy with Russia.
Assam government seeks ’serious’ investment in power
Assam government power minister Pradyut Bordoloi projected the state as a safe and secure destination for investment in the power sector.
India says Russia-built nuclear plant to start soon
India plans to start up a Russian-built nuclear power plant within weeks, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Friday, expressing confidence that the government can ease safety concerns that have prompted protests by local residents. After talks in Moscow with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, whose country is eager to build more nuclear power plants abroad, Singh said the first two reactors at the Kudankulam plant were close to being activated. The power station in the southern state of Tamil Nadu is one of several planned power projects that are seen as vital to plugging huge electricity shortages that have damaged economic growth. However, protests by local people against the power station gathered pace after the Fukushima accident in Japan in March. "We are confident that we will be able to persuade some of these people that their concerns are adequately taken care of, that our nuclear plants are safe and sound and there is nothing to worry about with regards to their safety," Singh said. "I am therefore confident that in a couple of weeks we should be able to go ahead with operationalising Kudankulam, and thereafter, by a period of six months, Kudankulam 2." The two countries have been in talks to build two more reactors at Kudankulam. Russia's Itar-Tass news agency cited the head of state nuclear power firm Rosatom, Sergei Kiriyenko, as saying Russia would provide India with a multi-billion dollar loan for the project, though no agreement was signed on Friday. Russia is keen to exploit its nuclear know-how, having already built two reactors in China and one in Iran that was plugged into the network in September. Rising tensions over Tehran's nuclear programme were on the leaders' agenda. Both countries urged Iran to cooperate with U.N. efforts to ensure it was not seeking nuclear arms, Russia and India said in a statement, but agreed that sanctions could be counterproductive. here
NTPC to set up 50-Mw solar plant in Madhya Pradesh
State-owned power major NTPC is going to set up its biggest solar (green) power station of 50 megawatts next year at an estimated cost of around Rs 700 crore in the electricity-starved state of Madhya Pradesh. “We are setting up our biggest solar power project at an estimated cost of around Rs 700 crore in Rajgarh district next year. NTPC will sell the entire power generated from this project to Madhya Pradesh,” NTPC official said today. “The government will soon ink a power purchase agreement with NTPC to procure energy from this project,” the official said. According to NTPC officials, it has kick-started the process of setting up 5 Mw and 15 Mw solar stations in Orissa, Himachal Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh, but the company’s biggest non-conventional energy project would be set up in Madhya Pradesh. “In all, we are working on generating over 100-Mw solar power energy projects across the country right now,” they said.
Suntech, Canadian Solar and Tata BP to supply Indian plant
Tata Power will order equipment for a $68 million solar project from three panel suppliers.
India's Tata Power seeks 130,000 T LSFO in rare term tender
Indian utility Tata Power has issued a rare term tender seeking up to about 130,000 tonnes of mostly low-sulphur (LSFO) fuel oil in up to five deliveries starting next month, traders said on Thursday. The tender, which follows another rare term requirement by Taiwan's CPC for more than 700,000 tonnes, is expected to keep sentiment for LSFO bullish, holding premiums for 0.3-percent sulphur lots at strong levels of around $100.00 a tonne to Singapore spot quotes. The tender closes on Dec. 19 and is valid until Dec. 23. It is for the delivery of up to five 25,000-tonne lots of 0.3 percent sulphur and 1,200-tonne parcels of high-sulphur between January and September to Mumbai on a cost-and-freight (C&F) basis. "The LSFO market has been strong since July, stemming from post-Fukushima Japan, and exacerbated by Taiwan needing more than their usual volumes as well," a Singapore-based Asian trader said. "Tata's requirement, though not at larger volumes than they usually take in a year, will further fan the bullish sentiment as they have departed from their usual practice of buying spot. This signals that they may see the market strengthening and want to lock in lower premiums." The first parcel is slated for delivery on Jan. 21-30, with deliveries for the remaining cargoes to be declared 40 days before the delivery dates. Tata typically buys 4-6 cargoes of 25,000-30,000 tonnes each annually from Singapore-based sellers. Sentiment in the LSFO market has been bullish since July, driven by strong demand from Japan in the wake of the March earthquake that crippled much of its power-generation capacity, due to damage to its nuclear plants. Its ravenous demand went beyond the country's peak summer period, with weekly import LSFO volumes averaging about 115,000 tonnes since July, the highest week-average levels since 2006 and up from last year's average of about 32,000 tonnes, official data show. Sentiment was further boosted by CPC's rare term tender for nine 80,000-tonne cargoes for delivery between April and December next year, which closed on Tuesday and will remain valid till Friday. The Taiwanese refiner is also seeking 40,000 tonnes of LSFO, for Feb. 1-29 delivery, via a spot tender that also includes 40,000 tonnes of HSFO, which closes next Tuesday. Premiums are also boosted by the global reduction of sulphur levels for marine fuels to 3.5 percent from Jan. 1, down from 4.0 percent now, by the International Maritime Organisation (IMO).
India to increase energy use with growth targets: PM
Increased energy consumption can be expected for India to reach its target of 9% economic growth.
Tata secures $68M funding for western Indian solar project
Tata Power has secured funding for its 25-MW solar project in Gujarat through a consortium .