As Delhi chokes, ministry says coal-fired plants need extra time to meet
emission norms
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[January 10, 2020]
By Sudarshan Varadhan
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's power
ministry has asked for coal-fired power plants around New Delhi, the
capital city with the worst air quality in the world, to be given more
time to install equipment to reduce emissions, after the year-end
deadline for action passed.
A government official, who requested anonymity told Reuters on Friday
the power ministry had sent its recommendation to the environment
ministry, which is in charge of enforcing the emission standards, for
the power plants to be given new deadlines starting July 2020 and ending
December 2021.
The utilities have cited costs and technical difficulties for missing
earlier deadlines, at the end of 2017 and then the end of 2019.
Ultimately, the environment ministry and its federal pollution regulator
could shut plants that continue to flout the rules, but such drastic
action would appear highly unlikely, observers say, because of the
public backlash to power shortages and the economic cost.
India had a phased plan for plants to comply with emission norms with
some plants given until end-December 2019, while others had till the end
of 2022.
The required changes involve some 440 coal-fired units, with a combined
capacity of 166.5 gigawatts (GW).
Private industry estimates and a Reuters analysis in November had found
that more than half of India's coal-fired power plants ordered to
retrofit equipment to reduce emissions of gases causing lung disease
were set to miss their deadlines.
Activists say the relaxing the deadline without imposing penalties will
retard efforts to improve the capital's air quality, which was the worst
on record during recent months, exacerbated by farmers in surrounding
states burning crop stubble.
"It is highly disrespectful of the law for them to come back with
another extension when most power plants have not even provided
contracts for the equipment for reducing pollution," said Nandikesh
Sivalingam, director at Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air.
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A boy examines a pigeon on a rooftop near a coal-fired power plant
in New Delhi, India, July 20, 2017. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
NTPC and Adani Power, two of the biggest electricity generators in
the country, have asked for their deadlines to be extended, Reuters
reported this week.
Last month, Reuters reported, NTPC had rejected buying foreign
technology to cut emissions of gases causing smog and acid rain.
Just one out of 11 utilities that had been bound to install the new
equipment by the end of last year met the deadline, but they have
all continued to operate regardless of the threat of being shut
down.
A top executive from one of the power plants that had missed the
deadline said the utility had received "oral communication" from the
regulator to continue operations.
Power plants around New Delhi are operated by state-run NTPC Ltd,
Vedanta Ltd, Larsen & Toubro Ltd and state government-owned power
generators.
Reuters did not receive any immediate response after seeking comment
from a top official at the federal pollution regulator, and a
spokesman for the environment ministry.
(Reporting by Sudarshan Varadhan; Writing by Aftab Ahmed; Editing by
Sanjeev Miglani & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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