Against the backdrop of fuel shortage, the country’s largest power producer NTPC has said that adequate availability of coal could have helped the company to produce 10-15 per cent more electricity every year.
State-run NTPC has an installed capacity of 36,014 MW.
Responding to a query on how much capacity has been affected by coal shortage, NTPC Chairman and Managing Director, Mr Arup Roy Choudhury, said it would be difficult to quantify.
“Definitely, it (coal shortage) is hurting our generation ... may be we could have produced 10-15 per cent more every year, if we had got the required amount of coal,” he told PTI in an interview.
For the current fiscal (2011-12), NTPC’s coal requirement is about 164 million tonnes (mt). Out of the total, about 114 mt is estimated to come from Coal India.
In October last year, there was a significant dip in domestic coal supplies for NTPC plants that were estimated to have impacted about 4,000 MW power generation capacity.
The disruption was mainly on account of strike by Coal India workers, Telangana agitation and heavy rains.
At that time, the affected NTPC power stations include Dadri in National Capital Region, Singrauli & Unchahar in North, Vindhyachal in Madhya Pradesh, Farakka & Kahalgaon in East and Ramagundam & Simhadari in South.
Also, Coal India’s lower production is also impacting power projects in the country.
Coal India, one of the world’s largest coal producers, has revised its production target to 440 mt for the current fiscal from 452 mt.
NTPC aims to have an installed capacity of 1,28,000 MW by 2032. It currently has 15 coal-based, 7 gas-based and six joint venture power stations.