The water scarcity crippling large parts of India has already cost coal power companies nearly seven billion units in lost electricity generation, with an estimated revenue loss of Rs 2,400 crore in the first five months of 2016, says Greenpeace India, the ecology group.
In a report issued on Thursday, it said water shortages had led to coal-power plant shutdowns in West Bengal, Karnataka and Maharashtra. NTPC, Adani Power, GMR, MahaGenco and Karnataka Power Corporation are among the companies affected. Most of the losses were between March and May, with plants unable to operate due to a lack of water for cooling.
Greenpeace India executive director Ravi Chellam said, “The coal power sector is already a water guzzler, consuming 4.6 billion cubic metres a year. Water, that could have met the most basic needs of 251 million Indians. The expansion of coal power will increase air pollution and deforestation; data show us it will also worsen the water crisis, posing serious financial risk to lenders and investors in these projects.”
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Equity analyst Jai Sharda, founder of Equitorials, said: “It’s clear that water scarcity can have a real impact on the profitability of coal power projects. Project lenders and shareholders alike should look carefully at this. The sector cannot afford more stranded projects or non-performing assets.”
THE GREAT WATER GRAB Cooling technologies of coal power plants have different water demands. Globally as well as in India, cooling technologies used by coal power plants fall into three categories: |
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According to the report, repeated shutdowns at NTPC’s Farakka thermal plant between February and April resulted in lost generation of about a billion units of electricity, translating to lost revenue of Rs 390 crore. Shutdowns at Adani’s Tiroda power plant in Maharashtra last month have cost the company 570 million units of electricity, with a value of nearly Rs 200 crore. For most of May, a little over four gigawatt of coal-fuelled power generation was shut, due to unavailability of water.
The Greenpeace report includes case studies of two regions where water scarcity poses a financial risk to new coal plants, Solapur in Maharashtra and the Krishna basin in Karnataka. NTPC’s Solapur power unit faces commissioning delays due, in part, to uncertainty over water supply. In the other region, NTPC’s Kudgi unit and KPC’s Raichur power plant were affected by lack of water this summer. And, more coal plants are being built in the water-stressed regions.