Page 1
As per Economic Survey 2023-24, India's energy needs are expected to grow
2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a growing economy's developmental priorities
and aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced through diversification of
the sources of imports and increased domestic production while reducing energy
demand. According to Ministry of Power, 54.5 per cent of lndia's power came
from thermal sources (like coal, gas and diesel), while 45.5 per cent came from
nonlfossil fuel sources, which includes 1.8 per cent nuclear power in June 2024[
Adopting gasification technology in India can revolutionise the coal sector,
reducing reliance on imports of natural gas, ammonia, methanol and other
essential products while reducing emission. High dependeney on imports mainly
for petroleum for its energy needs shifts to high import dependeney for Solar PV
panels and critical minerals whose supply chain is heavily skewed. India needs
to target diversi,,fled energy sources. S
associated with energy system
rsification will help minimise risk
g with low emission path.
Commission, Government of India, in various capa
DR S ( LAH|RY I I!eLa_u:.h.?Tis:^f`?TT.eLr^A_a.V|sfe,r.t.q.tp:
rkhand (on deput
ross the lndu
and the Planning Commission. He served for 25 years in the Planning
Minerals, Agriculture, and allied sectors. Email: sclahirv@gmail.com
EH
he International Energy Agency
(lEA) defines energy security as the
uninterrupted availability of energy
sources at an affordable price. Energy
security concerns are key driving force of energy
policy, considering that resources are limited, the
pace of energy transition would need to factor in
demands on the resources for improving
resilience to climate change and for sustained social
and economic development. Energy security refers
to a country's ability to ensure a reliable, sustainable
and uninterrupted supply of energy to meet its
economic, social and political needs. The four key
objectives of the new energy policy of our country
YOJANA SEPTEMBER 2024
Page 2
As per Economic Survey 2023-24, India's energy needs are expected to grow
2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a growing economy's developmental priorities
and aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced through diversification of
the sources of imports and increased domestic production while reducing energy
demand. According to Ministry of Power, 54.5 per cent of lndia's power came
from thermal sources (like coal, gas and diesel), while 45.5 per cent came from
nonlfossil fuel sources, which includes 1.8 per cent nuclear power in June 2024[
Adopting gasification technology in India can revolutionise the coal sector,
reducing reliance on imports of natural gas, ammonia, methanol and other
essential products while reducing emission. High dependeney on imports mainly
for petroleum for its energy needs shifts to high import dependeney for Solar PV
panels and critical minerals whose supply chain is heavily skewed. India needs
to target diversi,,fled energy sources. S
associated with energy system
rsification will help minimise risk
g with low emission path.
Commission, Government of India, in various capa
DR S ( LAH|RY I I!eLa_u:.h.?Tis:^f`?TT.eLr^A_a.V|sfe,r.t.q.tp:
rkhand (on deput
ross the lndu
and the Planning Commission. He served for 25 years in the Planning
Minerals, Agriculture, and allied sectors. Email: sclahirv@gmail.com
EH
he International Energy Agency
(lEA) defines energy security as the
uninterrupted availability of energy
sources at an affordable price. Energy
security concerns are key driving force of energy
policy, considering that resources are limited, the
pace of energy transition would need to factor in
demands on the resources for improving
resilience to climate change and for sustained social
and economic development. Energy security refers
to a country's ability to ensure a reliable, sustainable
and uninterrupted supply of energy to meet its
economic, social and political needs. The four key
objectives of the new energy policy of our country
YOJANA SEPTEMBER 2024
utunmMes
filtAHut
S More thou l.28 croro mgistrattons end t4 fakh applicctens
rocehodunderPMSurye®harMutBijtiYqjara
® Pumped storage pofie¥ to be brought out for etectdefty storage cnd
intngrationOfronermbte®mfg]r!ntheavarialienergrm!x
® R&D ct smut end medufro nuelaer roecters are ftever technologies
fernuefro""ngY
a JQint venture bet\veen NTse and BHEl to set up a full scale 8cO MW
commer€iol thamal pfant using AuSC* teehro!ogir
¢ Roodmep fer 'herd ta chct€' irdustde§ to be fomumed for trans!
• Energy audit of frodidenol miero and small industds in so ctust
firanctalsoppedfershiftlngthemtocteonerforms
are: access at affordable prices, improved en
security and independence, greater sustainability
and economic growth.
Today, India is heavily dependent on oil and
gas imports while also importing coal. As per
Economic survey 2023-24, lndia's energy needs are
expected to grow 2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a
growing economy's developmental priorities and
aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced
through diversification of the sources of imports
and increased domestic production while reducing
energy demand. Our fossil fuel requirement which
comprise 90 per cent of our commercial primary
energy supply are increasingly being met by
imports which means that reducing fossil fuel
consumption would promote the twin goals of
sustainability and security. NITI Aayog's India
Energy Security Scenarios 2047 estimates that
India will need to invest US$250 billion annually
until 2047 to prepare its energy systems for
net-zero pathways.
Budget 2024-25
As part of the Union Budget 2024-25, the
Finance Minister announced following key
measures to enhance energy security:
I The Government will collaborate with the
private sector on research and development
for Bharat Small Modular Reactors and new
nuclear energy technologies, and establish
Bharat Small Reactors.
I A policy document titled `Energy Transition
Pathways' will be released to balance
employment, growth and environmental
sustainability.
I A policy to promote pumped storage proj.ects
for electricity storage will be introduced which
will facilitate smooth integration of growing
share of renewable power with its variable and
intermittent nature in the overall energy mix.
I A joint venture between NTPC Limited and
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited will be
established to create an 800 MW commercial
plant using advanced ultra super critical
oadmap for moving the 'hard to abate'
stries from 'energy efficiency' targets
emission targets' will be formulated.
ropriate regulations for transition of these
dustries from the current `perform, achieve
and trade' mode to 'lndian carbon market'
mode will be put in place.
1 PM Suraj Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana has been
launched to install rooftop solar plants to
enable 1 crore households obtain free electricity
upto 300 units every month. The scheme has
generated remarkable response with more
than 1.28 crore household registrations besides
14 lakh applications.
I As support to traditional micro and small
enterprises, an investment-grade energy audit
of traditional micro and small industries in 60
clusters including brass and ceramic will be
facilitated. Financial support will be provided
for shifting them to cleaner forms of energy and
implementation of energy efficiency measures.
The scheme will be replicated in another loo
clusters in the next phase.
Budgetary AE!ocations FY 24-25
Apart from estimates and revenue, the
annual budget exercise provides directions to
the economic policy measures and articulate
major initiatives of the Government. In 2024-25,
the Ministry of Non Renewal Energy (MNRE) has
been allocated Rs 19100 crore which is an annual
increase of 86.7 per cent over the budget allocation
(Rs 10222.00 crore) in 2023-24. The budgetary
allocation for the Ministry of Power has been
pegged at Rs 20502 crore (as against Rs 20671 crore
SEPTEMBER 2024 YOJANA
Page 3
As per Economic Survey 2023-24, India's energy needs are expected to grow
2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a growing economy's developmental priorities
and aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced through diversification of
the sources of imports and increased domestic production while reducing energy
demand. According to Ministry of Power, 54.5 per cent of lndia's power came
from thermal sources (like coal, gas and diesel), while 45.5 per cent came from
nonlfossil fuel sources, which includes 1.8 per cent nuclear power in June 2024[
Adopting gasification technology in India can revolutionise the coal sector,
reducing reliance on imports of natural gas, ammonia, methanol and other
essential products while reducing emission. High dependeney on imports mainly
for petroleum for its energy needs shifts to high import dependeney for Solar PV
panels and critical minerals whose supply chain is heavily skewed. India needs
to target diversi,,fled energy sources. S
associated with energy system
rsification will help minimise risk
g with low emission path.
Commission, Government of India, in various capa
DR S ( LAH|RY I I!eLa_u:.h.?Tis:^f`?TT.eLr^A_a.V|sfe,r.t.q.tp:
rkhand (on deput
ross the lndu
and the Planning Commission. He served for 25 years in the Planning
Minerals, Agriculture, and allied sectors. Email: sclahirv@gmail.com
EH
he International Energy Agency
(lEA) defines energy security as the
uninterrupted availability of energy
sources at an affordable price. Energy
security concerns are key driving force of energy
policy, considering that resources are limited, the
pace of energy transition would need to factor in
demands on the resources for improving
resilience to climate change and for sustained social
and economic development. Energy security refers
to a country's ability to ensure a reliable, sustainable
and uninterrupted supply of energy to meet its
economic, social and political needs. The four key
objectives of the new energy policy of our country
YOJANA SEPTEMBER 2024
utunmMes
filtAHut
S More thou l.28 croro mgistrattons end t4 fakh applicctens
rocehodunderPMSurye®harMutBijtiYqjara
® Pumped storage pofie¥ to be brought out for etectdefty storage cnd
intngrationOfronermbte®mfg]r!ntheavarialienergrm!x
® R&D ct smut end medufro nuelaer roecters are ftever technologies
fernuefro""ngY
a JQint venture bet\veen NTse and BHEl to set up a full scale 8cO MW
commer€iol thamal pfant using AuSC* teehro!ogir
¢ Roodmep fer 'herd ta chct€' irdustde§ to be fomumed for trans!
• Energy audit of frodidenol miero and small industds in so ctust
firanctalsoppedfershiftlngthemtocteonerforms
are: access at affordable prices, improved en
security and independence, greater sustainability
and economic growth.
Today, India is heavily dependent on oil and
gas imports while also importing coal. As per
Economic survey 2023-24, lndia's energy needs are
expected to grow 2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a
growing economy's developmental priorities and
aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced
through diversification of the sources of imports
and increased domestic production while reducing
energy demand. Our fossil fuel requirement which
comprise 90 per cent of our commercial primary
energy supply are increasingly being met by
imports which means that reducing fossil fuel
consumption would promote the twin goals of
sustainability and security. NITI Aayog's India
Energy Security Scenarios 2047 estimates that
India will need to invest US$250 billion annually
until 2047 to prepare its energy systems for
net-zero pathways.
Budget 2024-25
As part of the Union Budget 2024-25, the
Finance Minister announced following key
measures to enhance energy security:
I The Government will collaborate with the
private sector on research and development
for Bharat Small Modular Reactors and new
nuclear energy technologies, and establish
Bharat Small Reactors.
I A policy document titled `Energy Transition
Pathways' will be released to balance
employment, growth and environmental
sustainability.
I A policy to promote pumped storage proj.ects
for electricity storage will be introduced which
will facilitate smooth integration of growing
share of renewable power with its variable and
intermittent nature in the overall energy mix.
I A joint venture between NTPC Limited and
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited will be
established to create an 800 MW commercial
plant using advanced ultra super critical
oadmap for moving the 'hard to abate'
stries from 'energy efficiency' targets
emission targets' will be formulated.
ropriate regulations for transition of these
dustries from the current `perform, achieve
and trade' mode to 'lndian carbon market'
mode will be put in place.
1 PM Suraj Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana has been
launched to install rooftop solar plants to
enable 1 crore households obtain free electricity
upto 300 units every month. The scheme has
generated remarkable response with more
than 1.28 crore household registrations besides
14 lakh applications.
I As support to traditional micro and small
enterprises, an investment-grade energy audit
of traditional micro and small industries in 60
clusters including brass and ceramic will be
facilitated. Financial support will be provided
for shifting them to cleaner forms of energy and
implementation of energy efficiency measures.
The scheme will be replicated in another loo
clusters in the next phase.
Budgetary AE!ocations FY 24-25
Apart from estimates and revenue, the
annual budget exercise provides directions to
the economic policy measures and articulate
major initiatives of the Government. In 2024-25,
the Ministry of Non Renewal Energy (MNRE) has
been allocated Rs 19100 crore which is an annual
increase of 86.7 per cent over the budget allocation
(Rs 10222.00 crore) in 2023-24. The budgetary
allocation for the Ministry of Power has been
pegged at Rs 20502 crore (as against Rs 20671 crore
SEPTEMBER 2024 YOJANA
budgeted in 2023-24) which is 0.81 per cent
lower than the allocation in the previous year.
The Ministry of Coal has been allotted Rs 192.58
crore (as against Rs 192.32 crore budgeted in 2023-
24) whereas budgetary allocation has been slashed
with respect to Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas at Rs 15930.26 crore (as against Rs
crore budgeted for the year 2023-24).
Amongst the major MNRE schemes, So
off Grid is allotted a significant hike i.e., Rs
crore as against budgeted allocation of
crore in 2023-24. This covers installation
41007
solar street lights, distribution of solar study I
and installation of solar power packs under Phase
3 implementation. The allocation under KUSUM
(Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthan Mahabhiyan),
launched by the Government to increa_se the
income of farmers and provide sources for irrigation
and de-dieselisation of agri-sector, is passed at
Rs 1496 crore as against Rs 1996.46 crore budgeted
in 2023-24. The existing Solar Power (GRID) scheme
(which is having budgeted allocation of Rs 4000
crore in 2023-24) is proposed to be subsumed
under PM Surya Ghar Muft BI.jll. scheme announced
in Feb'24 alongwith remaining financial outlay and
liabilities. Rs 8250 crore is allotted in the scheme.
Rs 600 crore is allotted in 2024-25 as against
Rs 500 crore budgeted in 2023-24 for the Green
Energy Corridor scheme. The provision will be
utilised for capacity addition of 6000 ckm (circuit
kilometres) transmission infrastructure under
intra state Green Energy Corridor project. Higher
allocation for the year 2024-25 (Rs 600 crore against
Rs 297 crore in 2023-24) is made in respect of
National Green Hydrogen Mission. The provision
is to make India the global hub for production,
ge and export of green hydrogen and its
atives and to achieve self-sufficieny through
energy and move in the direction towards
I clean energy transition. Among the major
mes of Ministry of Power, a) Strengthening
power system in North Eastern states allotted
Rs 2416 crore as against budgeted Rs 2902.62 crore
in 2023-24, b) Rs 12585 crore earmarked for Reform
linked distribution scheme against Rs 12071 crore
budgeted in 2023-24, c) Rs 3021 crore allotted to
the scheme -Assistance to CPSUs against budgeted
Rs 3931.34 crore in 2023-24.The Ministry of Power is
ingplementing some important schemes, eg Energy
conservation with a budget provision of Rs 25 crore
(Rs 30.90 crore provided for 23-24), Manufacturing
zones under Atmanirbhar Bharat package allotted
Rs 80 crore against budgeted Rs loo crore in 23-24,
Promoting energy efficiency in the economy with
budget allocation of Rs 40 crore against budget
of Rs 103.80 crore in 23124. The Ministry of Power
is entrusted with the development of battery
energy storage system and a budget allocation
of Rs 96 crore is made in 24-25 (as viability
gap funding). The allocations for Ministry of
Coal and Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas are made primarily for enhancing
domestic production, exploration/drilling,
identification of new mining block, etc and
adoption of clean technologies, etc.
Present Status
There are three typical features
characterised in lndia's energy use-high use
of bio-mass as a share of the total primary
energy supply, predominance of imports
of petroleum and use of domestic coal for
electric power generation. Petroleum (over
85 per cent imported) has a diversified
presence across transport, industrial sector,
residential and commercial sector which
poses a significant challenge given the
volatility in oil prices and limited access to
natural gas. Coal accounts for about 70 per
cent of the total electric power generation.
YOJANA
SEPTEMBER 2024
Page 4
As per Economic Survey 2023-24, India's energy needs are expected to grow
2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a growing economy's developmental priorities
and aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced through diversification of
the sources of imports and increased domestic production while reducing energy
demand. According to Ministry of Power, 54.5 per cent of lndia's power came
from thermal sources (like coal, gas and diesel), while 45.5 per cent came from
nonlfossil fuel sources, which includes 1.8 per cent nuclear power in June 2024[
Adopting gasification technology in India can revolutionise the coal sector,
reducing reliance on imports of natural gas, ammonia, methanol and other
essential products while reducing emission. High dependeney on imports mainly
for petroleum for its energy needs shifts to high import dependeney for Solar PV
panels and critical minerals whose supply chain is heavily skewed. India needs
to target diversi,,fled energy sources. S
associated with energy system
rsification will help minimise risk
g with low emission path.
Commission, Government of India, in various capa
DR S ( LAH|RY I I!eLa_u:.h.?Tis:^f`?TT.eLr^A_a.V|sfe,r.t.q.tp:
rkhand (on deput
ross the lndu
and the Planning Commission. He served for 25 years in the Planning
Minerals, Agriculture, and allied sectors. Email: sclahirv@gmail.com
EH
he International Energy Agency
(lEA) defines energy security as the
uninterrupted availability of energy
sources at an affordable price. Energy
security concerns are key driving force of energy
policy, considering that resources are limited, the
pace of energy transition would need to factor in
demands on the resources for improving
resilience to climate change and for sustained social
and economic development. Energy security refers
to a country's ability to ensure a reliable, sustainable
and uninterrupted supply of energy to meet its
economic, social and political needs. The four key
objectives of the new energy policy of our country
YOJANA SEPTEMBER 2024
utunmMes
filtAHut
S More thou l.28 croro mgistrattons end t4 fakh applicctens
rocehodunderPMSurye®harMutBijtiYqjara
® Pumped storage pofie¥ to be brought out for etectdefty storage cnd
intngrationOfronermbte®mfg]r!ntheavarialienergrm!x
® R&D ct smut end medufro nuelaer roecters are ftever technologies
fernuefro""ngY
a JQint venture bet\veen NTse and BHEl to set up a full scale 8cO MW
commer€iol thamal pfant using AuSC* teehro!ogir
¢ Roodmep fer 'herd ta chct€' irdustde§ to be fomumed for trans!
• Energy audit of frodidenol miero and small industds in so ctust
firanctalsoppedfershiftlngthemtocteonerforms
are: access at affordable prices, improved en
security and independence, greater sustainability
and economic growth.
Today, India is heavily dependent on oil and
gas imports while also importing coal. As per
Economic survey 2023-24, lndia's energy needs are
expected to grow 2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a
growing economy's developmental priorities and
aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced
through diversification of the sources of imports
and increased domestic production while reducing
energy demand. Our fossil fuel requirement which
comprise 90 per cent of our commercial primary
energy supply are increasingly being met by
imports which means that reducing fossil fuel
consumption would promote the twin goals of
sustainability and security. NITI Aayog's India
Energy Security Scenarios 2047 estimates that
India will need to invest US$250 billion annually
until 2047 to prepare its energy systems for
net-zero pathways.
Budget 2024-25
As part of the Union Budget 2024-25, the
Finance Minister announced following key
measures to enhance energy security:
I The Government will collaborate with the
private sector on research and development
for Bharat Small Modular Reactors and new
nuclear energy technologies, and establish
Bharat Small Reactors.
I A policy document titled `Energy Transition
Pathways' will be released to balance
employment, growth and environmental
sustainability.
I A policy to promote pumped storage proj.ects
for electricity storage will be introduced which
will facilitate smooth integration of growing
share of renewable power with its variable and
intermittent nature in the overall energy mix.
I A joint venture between NTPC Limited and
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited will be
established to create an 800 MW commercial
plant using advanced ultra super critical
oadmap for moving the 'hard to abate'
stries from 'energy efficiency' targets
emission targets' will be formulated.
ropriate regulations for transition of these
dustries from the current `perform, achieve
and trade' mode to 'lndian carbon market'
mode will be put in place.
1 PM Suraj Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana has been
launched to install rooftop solar plants to
enable 1 crore households obtain free electricity
upto 300 units every month. The scheme has
generated remarkable response with more
than 1.28 crore household registrations besides
14 lakh applications.
I As support to traditional micro and small
enterprises, an investment-grade energy audit
of traditional micro and small industries in 60
clusters including brass and ceramic will be
facilitated. Financial support will be provided
for shifting them to cleaner forms of energy and
implementation of energy efficiency measures.
The scheme will be replicated in another loo
clusters in the next phase.
Budgetary AE!ocations FY 24-25
Apart from estimates and revenue, the
annual budget exercise provides directions to
the economic policy measures and articulate
major initiatives of the Government. In 2024-25,
the Ministry of Non Renewal Energy (MNRE) has
been allocated Rs 19100 crore which is an annual
increase of 86.7 per cent over the budget allocation
(Rs 10222.00 crore) in 2023-24. The budgetary
allocation for the Ministry of Power has been
pegged at Rs 20502 crore (as against Rs 20671 crore
SEPTEMBER 2024 YOJANA
budgeted in 2023-24) which is 0.81 per cent
lower than the allocation in the previous year.
The Ministry of Coal has been allotted Rs 192.58
crore (as against Rs 192.32 crore budgeted in 2023-
24) whereas budgetary allocation has been slashed
with respect to Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas at Rs 15930.26 crore (as against Rs
crore budgeted for the year 2023-24).
Amongst the major MNRE schemes, So
off Grid is allotted a significant hike i.e., Rs
crore as against budgeted allocation of
crore in 2023-24. This covers installation
41007
solar street lights, distribution of solar study I
and installation of solar power packs under Phase
3 implementation. The allocation under KUSUM
(Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthan Mahabhiyan),
launched by the Government to increa_se the
income of farmers and provide sources for irrigation
and de-dieselisation of agri-sector, is passed at
Rs 1496 crore as against Rs 1996.46 crore budgeted
in 2023-24. The existing Solar Power (GRID) scheme
(which is having budgeted allocation of Rs 4000
crore in 2023-24) is proposed to be subsumed
under PM Surya Ghar Muft BI.jll. scheme announced
in Feb'24 alongwith remaining financial outlay and
liabilities. Rs 8250 crore is allotted in the scheme.
Rs 600 crore is allotted in 2024-25 as against
Rs 500 crore budgeted in 2023-24 for the Green
Energy Corridor scheme. The provision will be
utilised for capacity addition of 6000 ckm (circuit
kilometres) transmission infrastructure under
intra state Green Energy Corridor project. Higher
allocation for the year 2024-25 (Rs 600 crore against
Rs 297 crore in 2023-24) is made in respect of
National Green Hydrogen Mission. The provision
is to make India the global hub for production,
ge and export of green hydrogen and its
atives and to achieve self-sufficieny through
energy and move in the direction towards
I clean energy transition. Among the major
mes of Ministry of Power, a) Strengthening
power system in North Eastern states allotted
Rs 2416 crore as against budgeted Rs 2902.62 crore
in 2023-24, b) Rs 12585 crore earmarked for Reform
linked distribution scheme against Rs 12071 crore
budgeted in 2023-24, c) Rs 3021 crore allotted to
the scheme -Assistance to CPSUs against budgeted
Rs 3931.34 crore in 2023-24.The Ministry of Power is
ingplementing some important schemes, eg Energy
conservation with a budget provision of Rs 25 crore
(Rs 30.90 crore provided for 23-24), Manufacturing
zones under Atmanirbhar Bharat package allotted
Rs 80 crore against budgeted Rs loo crore in 23-24,
Promoting energy efficiency in the economy with
budget allocation of Rs 40 crore against budget
of Rs 103.80 crore in 23124. The Ministry of Power
is entrusted with the development of battery
energy storage system and a budget allocation
of Rs 96 crore is made in 24-25 (as viability
gap funding). The allocations for Ministry of
Coal and Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas are made primarily for enhancing
domestic production, exploration/drilling,
identification of new mining block, etc and
adoption of clean technologies, etc.
Present Status
There are three typical features
characterised in lndia's energy use-high use
of bio-mass as a share of the total primary
energy supply, predominance of imports
of petroleum and use of domestic coal for
electric power generation. Petroleum (over
85 per cent imported) has a diversified
presence across transport, industrial sector,
residential and commercial sector which
poses a significant challenge given the
volatility in oil prices and limited access to
natural gas. Coal accounts for about 70 per
cent of the total electric power generation.
YOJANA
SEPTEMBER 2024
Coal is critical input material to industries eg steel,
iron, cement, paper, etc. According to Ministry of
Power, 54.5 per cent of lndia's power came from
thermal sources (like coal, gas and diesel), while
45.5 per cent came from non-fossil fuel sources,
which includes 1.8 per cent nuclear power in June
2024. The composition in the electricity sector
has significantly changed due to the phasing
in renewable energy (RE) with non-fossil power
capacity being 45.5 per cent (as of June 2024)
from around 32 per cent in April 2014. Incidentally,
India pledged in Paris (Paris Agreement for Climate
Change) to generate 40 per cent of lndia's power
capacity from non-fossil fuel sources and create
an additional carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes
of C02 equivalent by 2030. India has overachieved
the target set for installed
non-fossil fuel sources.
policy lnitiatives
Recent initiatives for en
Of RE are a) PM-Surya Ghar M
in February 2024 with a tota
crore is expected to add 30G
acity from
ing the pro
Yojanal
and reduce 720 million tonnes of C02 equivalent
across the solar value chain, b) the Government
has notified the national offshore wind energy
policy and offshore wind energy lease rules 2023.
Several offshore zones have been identified for
harnessing this potential and c) underscoring
the importance of green hydrogen in reducing
carbon emissions in the hard-to-abate sectors.
Indian Green Hydrogen Mission targets 5MMT
(million metric tonnes) of green hydrogen by
2030. The scheme offers financial incentives to
boost electrolyser manufacturing and production.
Additionally, the budget 2024-25 promotes
the development of small and modular nuclear
reactors in partnership with the private sector and
emphasises renewable energy storage solutions
and advanced ultra-supercritical thermal power
plants.These initiative,s will bolster energy security
by diversifying energy sources and reducing
teliance on fossil fuels, while also mitigating
climate change by lowering greenhouse gas
emissions. Enhancing the storage and integration
of renewable energy, the government is set
to introduce a robust Pumped Storage Policy
(PSP). This initiative aims to provide a large-scale
solution for storing excess electricity, facilitating
smoother integration of renewable sources into
lndia's energy mix and ensuring continuous
power supplies while helping moderate prices.
A roadmap will be formulated to transition `hard
to abate' industries from energy efficiency targets
to emission targets. This shift will move from the
'Perform, Achieve and Trade' mode to the 'lndian
Carbon Market' mode, setting a new regulatory
framework for these sectors. The government
intends to set up a Critical Mineral Mission for
domestic production, recycling of critical minerals
and overseas acquisition of critical mineral assets.
There is a proposal to fully exempt customs
duty from 25 critical minerals, such as lithium,
copper, cobalt and rare earth elements, which
are critical for sustainable technologies such as
electric vehicles and renewable energy systems.
The Government has launched several clean coal
.initiatives including coal gasification mission
aiming to gasify 100 million Tonnes of coal by
2030. Adopting gasification technology in India
can revolutionise the coal sector, reducing reliance
on imports of natural gas, ammonia, methanol and
other essential products while reducing emission.
Initiatives like extracting coal based methane gas
(CBM), coal beneficiation, carbon capture and
storage (CCS), etc mitigate emissions and enhance
environmental sustainability. Adoption of super
critical and ultra super critical technologies for
thermal power plants has led to lower emission and
higher efficiency. Further, it is proposed that 800 MW
commercial plant using advanced ultra super
critical technology in a Joint Venture (JV) between
NTPC Limited and BHEL will be established.
challenges ` 4,
Energy demand is expected to increase as the
country develops in line with the goal of Viksit
Bharat and a concommitant rise in RE capacity
may lead to baseline efficiency as the supply
composition changes.
Large scale phasing in of RE poses several risks
associated with intermittency and dispatchability
in the energy system. Addressing the issue is critical
for significant deployment of RE. Expanding RE
and clean fuels will increase dema.nd for land and
water. The availability of land is a maj.or challenge
for India.
Critical minerals/metals are required for RE
and battery storage technologies. The sources
of minerals are geographically concentrated eg
SEPTEMBER 2024 YOJANA
Page 5
As per Economic Survey 2023-24, India's energy needs are expected to grow
2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a growing economy's developmental priorities
and aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced through diversification of
the sources of imports and increased domestic production while reducing energy
demand. According to Ministry of Power, 54.5 per cent of lndia's power came
from thermal sources (like coal, gas and diesel), while 45.5 per cent came from
nonlfossil fuel sources, which includes 1.8 per cent nuclear power in June 2024[
Adopting gasification technology in India can revolutionise the coal sector,
reducing reliance on imports of natural gas, ammonia, methanol and other
essential products while reducing emission. High dependeney on imports mainly
for petroleum for its energy needs shifts to high import dependeney for Solar PV
panels and critical minerals whose supply chain is heavily skewed. India needs
to target diversi,,fled energy sources. S
associated with energy system
rsification will help minimise risk
g with low emission path.
Commission, Government of India, in various capa
DR S ( LAH|RY I I!eLa_u:.h.?Tis:^f`?TT.eLr^A_a.V|sfe,r.t.q.tp:
rkhand (on deput
ross the lndu
and the Planning Commission. He served for 25 years in the Planning
Minerals, Agriculture, and allied sectors. Email: sclahirv@gmail.com
EH
he International Energy Agency
(lEA) defines energy security as the
uninterrupted availability of energy
sources at an affordable price. Energy
security concerns are key driving force of energy
policy, considering that resources are limited, the
pace of energy transition would need to factor in
demands on the resources for improving
resilience to climate change and for sustained social
and economic development. Energy security refers
to a country's ability to ensure a reliable, sustainable
and uninterrupted supply of energy to meet its
economic, social and political needs. The four key
objectives of the new energy policy of our country
YOJANA SEPTEMBER 2024
utunmMes
filtAHut
S More thou l.28 croro mgistrattons end t4 fakh applicctens
rocehodunderPMSurye®harMutBijtiYqjara
® Pumped storage pofie¥ to be brought out for etectdefty storage cnd
intngrationOfronermbte®mfg]r!ntheavarialienergrm!x
® R&D ct smut end medufro nuelaer roecters are ftever technologies
fernuefro""ngY
a JQint venture bet\veen NTse and BHEl to set up a full scale 8cO MW
commer€iol thamal pfant using AuSC* teehro!ogir
¢ Roodmep fer 'herd ta chct€' irdustde§ to be fomumed for trans!
• Energy audit of frodidenol miero and small industds in so ctust
firanctalsoppedfershiftlngthemtocteonerforms
are: access at affordable prices, improved en
security and independence, greater sustainability
and economic growth.
Today, India is heavily dependent on oil and
gas imports while also importing coal. As per
Economic survey 2023-24, lndia's energy needs are
expected to grow 2 to 2.5 times by 2047 to meet a
growing economy's developmental priorities and
aspirations. Energy security would be enhanced
through diversification of the sources of imports
and increased domestic production while reducing
energy demand. Our fossil fuel requirement which
comprise 90 per cent of our commercial primary
energy supply are increasingly being met by
imports which means that reducing fossil fuel
consumption would promote the twin goals of
sustainability and security. NITI Aayog's India
Energy Security Scenarios 2047 estimates that
India will need to invest US$250 billion annually
until 2047 to prepare its energy systems for
net-zero pathways.
Budget 2024-25
As part of the Union Budget 2024-25, the
Finance Minister announced following key
measures to enhance energy security:
I The Government will collaborate with the
private sector on research and development
for Bharat Small Modular Reactors and new
nuclear energy technologies, and establish
Bharat Small Reactors.
I A policy document titled `Energy Transition
Pathways' will be released to balance
employment, growth and environmental
sustainability.
I A policy to promote pumped storage proj.ects
for electricity storage will be introduced which
will facilitate smooth integration of growing
share of renewable power with its variable and
intermittent nature in the overall energy mix.
I A joint venture between NTPC Limited and
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited will be
established to create an 800 MW commercial
plant using advanced ultra super critical
oadmap for moving the 'hard to abate'
stries from 'energy efficiency' targets
emission targets' will be formulated.
ropriate regulations for transition of these
dustries from the current `perform, achieve
and trade' mode to 'lndian carbon market'
mode will be put in place.
1 PM Suraj Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana has been
launched to install rooftop solar plants to
enable 1 crore households obtain free electricity
upto 300 units every month. The scheme has
generated remarkable response with more
than 1.28 crore household registrations besides
14 lakh applications.
I As support to traditional micro and small
enterprises, an investment-grade energy audit
of traditional micro and small industries in 60
clusters including brass and ceramic will be
facilitated. Financial support will be provided
for shifting them to cleaner forms of energy and
implementation of energy efficiency measures.
The scheme will be replicated in another loo
clusters in the next phase.
Budgetary AE!ocations FY 24-25
Apart from estimates and revenue, the
annual budget exercise provides directions to
the economic policy measures and articulate
major initiatives of the Government. In 2024-25,
the Ministry of Non Renewal Energy (MNRE) has
been allocated Rs 19100 crore which is an annual
increase of 86.7 per cent over the budget allocation
(Rs 10222.00 crore) in 2023-24. The budgetary
allocation for the Ministry of Power has been
pegged at Rs 20502 crore (as against Rs 20671 crore
SEPTEMBER 2024 YOJANA
budgeted in 2023-24) which is 0.81 per cent
lower than the allocation in the previous year.
The Ministry of Coal has been allotted Rs 192.58
crore (as against Rs 192.32 crore budgeted in 2023-
24) whereas budgetary allocation has been slashed
with respect to Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas at Rs 15930.26 crore (as against Rs
crore budgeted for the year 2023-24).
Amongst the major MNRE schemes, So
off Grid is allotted a significant hike i.e., Rs
crore as against budgeted allocation of
crore in 2023-24. This covers installation
41007
solar street lights, distribution of solar study I
and installation of solar power packs under Phase
3 implementation. The allocation under KUSUM
(Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthan Mahabhiyan),
launched by the Government to increa_se the
income of farmers and provide sources for irrigation
and de-dieselisation of agri-sector, is passed at
Rs 1496 crore as against Rs 1996.46 crore budgeted
in 2023-24. The existing Solar Power (GRID) scheme
(which is having budgeted allocation of Rs 4000
crore in 2023-24) is proposed to be subsumed
under PM Surya Ghar Muft BI.jll. scheme announced
in Feb'24 alongwith remaining financial outlay and
liabilities. Rs 8250 crore is allotted in the scheme.
Rs 600 crore is allotted in 2024-25 as against
Rs 500 crore budgeted in 2023-24 for the Green
Energy Corridor scheme. The provision will be
utilised for capacity addition of 6000 ckm (circuit
kilometres) transmission infrastructure under
intra state Green Energy Corridor project. Higher
allocation for the year 2024-25 (Rs 600 crore against
Rs 297 crore in 2023-24) is made in respect of
National Green Hydrogen Mission. The provision
is to make India the global hub for production,
ge and export of green hydrogen and its
atives and to achieve self-sufficieny through
energy and move in the direction towards
I clean energy transition. Among the major
mes of Ministry of Power, a) Strengthening
power system in North Eastern states allotted
Rs 2416 crore as against budgeted Rs 2902.62 crore
in 2023-24, b) Rs 12585 crore earmarked for Reform
linked distribution scheme against Rs 12071 crore
budgeted in 2023-24, c) Rs 3021 crore allotted to
the scheme -Assistance to CPSUs against budgeted
Rs 3931.34 crore in 2023-24.The Ministry of Power is
ingplementing some important schemes, eg Energy
conservation with a budget provision of Rs 25 crore
(Rs 30.90 crore provided for 23-24), Manufacturing
zones under Atmanirbhar Bharat package allotted
Rs 80 crore against budgeted Rs loo crore in 23-24,
Promoting energy efficiency in the economy with
budget allocation of Rs 40 crore against budget
of Rs 103.80 crore in 23124. The Ministry of Power
is entrusted with the development of battery
energy storage system and a budget allocation
of Rs 96 crore is made in 24-25 (as viability
gap funding). The allocations for Ministry of
Coal and Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas are made primarily for enhancing
domestic production, exploration/drilling,
identification of new mining block, etc and
adoption of clean technologies, etc.
Present Status
There are three typical features
characterised in lndia's energy use-high use
of bio-mass as a share of the total primary
energy supply, predominance of imports
of petroleum and use of domestic coal for
electric power generation. Petroleum (over
85 per cent imported) has a diversified
presence across transport, industrial sector,
residential and commercial sector which
poses a significant challenge given the
volatility in oil prices and limited access to
natural gas. Coal accounts for about 70 per
cent of the total electric power generation.
YOJANA
SEPTEMBER 2024
Coal is critical input material to industries eg steel,
iron, cement, paper, etc. According to Ministry of
Power, 54.5 per cent of lndia's power came from
thermal sources (like coal, gas and diesel), while
45.5 per cent came from non-fossil fuel sources,
which includes 1.8 per cent nuclear power in June
2024. The composition in the electricity sector
has significantly changed due to the phasing
in renewable energy (RE) with non-fossil power
capacity being 45.5 per cent (as of June 2024)
from around 32 per cent in April 2014. Incidentally,
India pledged in Paris (Paris Agreement for Climate
Change) to generate 40 per cent of lndia's power
capacity from non-fossil fuel sources and create
an additional carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes
of C02 equivalent by 2030. India has overachieved
the target set for installed
non-fossil fuel sources.
policy lnitiatives
Recent initiatives for en
Of RE are a) PM-Surya Ghar M
in February 2024 with a tota
crore is expected to add 30G
acity from
ing the pro
Yojanal
and reduce 720 million tonnes of C02 equivalent
across the solar value chain, b) the Government
has notified the national offshore wind energy
policy and offshore wind energy lease rules 2023.
Several offshore zones have been identified for
harnessing this potential and c) underscoring
the importance of green hydrogen in reducing
carbon emissions in the hard-to-abate sectors.
Indian Green Hydrogen Mission targets 5MMT
(million metric tonnes) of green hydrogen by
2030. The scheme offers financial incentives to
boost electrolyser manufacturing and production.
Additionally, the budget 2024-25 promotes
the development of small and modular nuclear
reactors in partnership with the private sector and
emphasises renewable energy storage solutions
and advanced ultra-supercritical thermal power
plants.These initiative,s will bolster energy security
by diversifying energy sources and reducing
teliance on fossil fuels, while also mitigating
climate change by lowering greenhouse gas
emissions. Enhancing the storage and integration
of renewable energy, the government is set
to introduce a robust Pumped Storage Policy
(PSP). This initiative aims to provide a large-scale
solution for storing excess electricity, facilitating
smoother integration of renewable sources into
lndia's energy mix and ensuring continuous
power supplies while helping moderate prices.
A roadmap will be formulated to transition `hard
to abate' industries from energy efficiency targets
to emission targets. This shift will move from the
'Perform, Achieve and Trade' mode to the 'lndian
Carbon Market' mode, setting a new regulatory
framework for these sectors. The government
intends to set up a Critical Mineral Mission for
domestic production, recycling of critical minerals
and overseas acquisition of critical mineral assets.
There is a proposal to fully exempt customs
duty from 25 critical minerals, such as lithium,
copper, cobalt and rare earth elements, which
are critical for sustainable technologies such as
electric vehicles and renewable energy systems.
The Government has launched several clean coal
.initiatives including coal gasification mission
aiming to gasify 100 million Tonnes of coal by
2030. Adopting gasification technology in India
can revolutionise the coal sector, reducing reliance
on imports of natural gas, ammonia, methanol and
other essential products while reducing emission.
Initiatives like extracting coal based methane gas
(CBM), coal beneficiation, carbon capture and
storage (CCS), etc mitigate emissions and enhance
environmental sustainability. Adoption of super
critical and ultra super critical technologies for
thermal power plants has led to lower emission and
higher efficiency. Further, it is proposed that 800 MW
commercial plant using advanced ultra super
critical technology in a Joint Venture (JV) between
NTPC Limited and BHEL will be established.
challenges ` 4,
Energy demand is expected to increase as the
country develops in line with the goal of Viksit
Bharat and a concommitant rise in RE capacity
may lead to baseline efficiency as the supply
composition changes.
Large scale phasing in of RE poses several risks
associated with intermittency and dispatchability
in the energy system. Addressing the issue is critical
for significant deployment of RE. Expanding RE
and clean fuels will increase dema.nd for land and
water. The availability of land is a maj.or challenge
for India.
Critical minerals/metals are required for RE
and battery storage technologies. The sources
of minerals are geographically concentrated eg
SEPTEMBER 2024 YOJANA
graphite (China 79 per cent), cobalt (DRC 70 per
cent), rare earths (China 60 per cent) and Lithium
(Aus 55 per cent). The concentration level is even
higher for processing with China dominating
across the board. India's initiative to build
domestic capacity should be seen in the backdrop
of the current supply chain for RE which is heavily
skewed. Shifting lndia's high import dependency
from petroleum to solar panels and critical
minerals, which have complex supply chains and
are currently subject to geopolitical issues, would
be a challenge.
Solar PV waste recycling is a challenge. SPV
panels have lifetime of 25-30 years. SPV waste
recycled as scrap poses risks to environment and
human life due to toxic metals.
Conclusion
*
+
For lndia's ensuring ener
should be expanded as much as
short to medium term, the foc
be actively adopting clean tec
security,
ssible in t
Government initiatives for cleaner coal
gasification, CBM, CCS and coal beneficiation, etc
to mitigate emissions and enhance environmental
sustainability needs to be promoted. Solar power
installed capacity has increased significantly.
However, risks are associated with the large scale
phasing in of renewable eg intermittency, grid
integration, back up power generation, storage,
etc. It is important to supplement with other
non-fossil fuel resources eg nuclear, biofuel and
hydrogen. High dependency on imports mainly
for petroleum for its energy needs shifts to high
import dependency for Solar PV panels and
critical minerals whose supply chain is heavily
skewed. India needs to target diversified energy
sources. Such diversification will help minimise
risk associated with energy system while
pursuing with low emission path. It is suggested
to integrate RE with nuclear power, bio-fuels and
green hydrogen to address the risks associated
with large-scale RE adoption. Financial support
proposed for traditional micro and small scale
sector to transition to cleaner energy forms will
bring in positive change. I
References
1. Finance Minister's Budget 24-25 Speech, Ministry of
Finance, GOI
2. Expenditure Budget 24-25 document, MinistryofFinance,
Gol
3. Ministries Demands for Grant 24-25, Ministry of Finance,
Gol
4. Economic survey 23-24 document, Ministry ofFinance, GOI
5. India Energy security scenario, 2047, NITI Aayog, GOI
6. Objectives of New Energy policy, Ministry of coal, PIB, Gol
7. Annual Report22-23, MinistryofNon Renewable Energy,Gol
8. Annual Report 22-23, Ministryofpower, Gol
9. Annual Report22-23, Ministryofcoal,Gol
10. Annual Report 22-23, Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Gas, Gol.
YOJANA SEPTEMBER 2024
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