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India's electricity production reaches a two-year high due to intense heat

India's electricity production in April reached 167.61 billion?kilowatt?hours?, the highest level since May 2024?and will continue to rise?as intense heat leads to record highs in demand?, according to an analysis of government data?. El Nino forecasts are expected to lead to hotter, drier weather across Asia. Grid-India data revealed that peak power demand (a measure of maximum electricity requirements at any time) had already reached a record level on April 25. Peak power demand is expected to reach 270 GW during the hottest months in May and June.

Grid-India data showed that India's annual power generation increased by 5.3% from April to April.

RENEWABLE GENERACY INCREASES IT SHARE OF MIX

Data showed that the share of renewable energy generation in India's electricity mix increased to 16.5%. This is the highest level since July 2025. The South Asian nation produced 27,58?billion? kWh of renewable energy in April, an increase of 22.3% over the previous year.

Debabrata Ghosh said that a solar-heavy system can meet the absolute peak demand in the daytime. Ghosh said India needs more power storage infrastructure in order to meet peak demand when solar power cannot be produced "at the earliest". According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), large parts of India experienced temperatures of up to 45 degrees Celsius in April.

In March, the government stated that it was confident about meeting the peak of 270 GW.

The data shows that coal-fired electricity generation grew 2.6% on an annual basis to 121.34 billion kWh (about 125.34 billion kWh) in April, which is the fastest growth since December.

The coal share of the total power generation fell to 72.4% from 74.3% in April, as renewables expanded.

The data revealed that hydropower production increased by 11.8%, to 11,46 billion?kWh. Gas-based electricity generation dropped 33% from April of last year due to high fuel prices and supply constraints related to the Middle East crisis.

Gas-fired power usage increased during peak demand periods despite this. The gas-fired generation increased to 9.6 GW by the end of April, up from 2 GW at the beginning of the month. This highlights its role as a back-up power source. Sethuraman N.R., Nidhi V.R. and Babrara L. Lewis edited the report.

(source: Reuters)