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Official: India does not plan to increase coal power beyond 2035.

A top official in the power ministry said that India has no immediate plans to increase coal power generation beyond 2035.

Pankaj Agarwal told an audience at a power ministry function that India wants to meet its energy needs. "By 2035, our goal is to have coal capacity of 307 Gigawatts."

He said that it was "premature" to predict what the future holds beyond 2035.

India proposed this year to increase its coal power by 46%, from its current 210 GW. It also doubled its non-fossil energy capacity of 500 GW. Agarwal stated that the coal power plans were in line with India's energy needs.

India has reduced power production for the majority of this year due to grid challenges caused by the integration surplus clean energy in the grid.

Agarwal said that the country could decide to add more coal capacity once it has studied the power demand growth and the rate of integration of renewable energy into the grid for three years.

He said that India should evaluate grid challenges as well as the costs of storing clean energy in batteries before adding additional coal capacity after 2035.

The annual decline in India's coal-fired electricity generation, which accounts for 75% of its output, was the highest since 2020, as the mild weather decreased cooling demand.

Even so, some Indian utilities have signed long-term contracts to purchase coal-fired generators in order to meet the projected increase in evening demand. Reporting by Sethuraman NR from Delhi and Jayshree Upadhyay from Mumbai; editing by William Mallard

(source: Reuters)