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Report says India will increase coal consumption over the next 25-year period.

Report says India will increase coal consumption over the next 25-year period.
Report says India will increase coal consumption over the next 25-year period.

Long-term projections by the government think-tank NITI Aayog indicate that India's coal use could double by 2050 before plummeting as it shifts to cleaner energy.

The current scenario, which assumes that no new decarbonisation initiatives are taken, predicts a peak coal demand of 2.62 billion tons by 2050. This is more than twice the current level of 1.26 billion.

The report indicates that industrial demand will keep coal consumption at a high level of 1.80 billion tonnes by 2070.

India aims to achieve net-zero emission by 2070. Under this scenario, coal use is expected to peak at 1,83 billion tons in the year 2050, before falling back down to 161 million tonnes by 2070.

The report stated that virtually all coal usage in 2070 will be limited to sectors which are difficult to abate, such as steel and cement, and will require carbon capture and storage.

To meet the forecasted electricity demand, China is the world's second largest coal consumer. It relies on coal for almost three quarters of its energy production.

The report warns coal will continue to be essential in the short term, to balance the grid and support the increasing solar and wind energy capacity.

The report said that India would need to increase its nuclear energy production, expand the grid, lower the costs of clean technologies and use large battery storage systems in order to move away from coal.

The report said that even if coal plants continue to run, they will do so less frequently and will be used to meet peak electricity demands or in emergencies. (Reporting by Sethuraman NR; Editing by Kirsten Donovan )

(source: Reuters)