Global Coal Plant Capacity Dips in 2021

In News

  • Global coal-plant capacity under development declined in 2021, according to a report by the Global Energy Monitor. 

Global Energy Monitor (GEM)

  • It is a San Francisco-based non-governmental organisation which catalogues fossil fuel and renewable energy projects worldwide.
  • GEM shares information in support of clean energy and its data and reports on energy trends are widely cited by governments, media, and academic researchers.
  • Global Energy Monitor produces datasets that document energy infrastructures at the project level.
    • This data is used by a variety of organisations, governments, media outlets, and academic institutions.
  • It also conducts an annual survey of coal power capacity under development or deployment.
  • Major reports by Global Energy Monitor (GEM)
    • Boom and Bust
    • Gambling On Gas: Risks Grow For Japan’s $20 Billion LNG Financing Spree
    • Gas Bubble 2020: Tracking Global LNG Infrastructure
    • How Plans for New Coal Are Changing Around the World
    • A Coal Phase-Out Pathway for 1.5 °C

Major Findings of the report

  • China leads in coal power expansion:
    • With about 25,000 MW in new coal plants, followed by India with around 6,100 MW.
    • In all, 45,000 MW of global coal power capacity, a little over half of which was from China was commissioned in 2021 while 26,8000 MW was retired, causing a net increase in the global coal fleet of 18,200 MW.
    • In 2020, the net increase was 11,500 MW, which was the result of 56,800 MW in new capacity and 45,300 MW of global retirements.
  • Decline in Coal power capacity:
    • After rising in 2020 for the first time since 2015, total coal power capacity under development declined 13% last year, from 525 GW to 457 GW, a record low.
    • 1 GW is 1,000 MW.
  • Plants under consideration:
    • Thirty-four countries have new coal plants under consideration, down from 41 countries in January 2021.
  • Countries to stop funding in coal:
    • China, South Korea, and Japan have pledged to stop funding new coal plants in other countries, but China continues to lead all countries in domestic development of new coal plants, commissioning more coal capacity than the rest of the world combined.
  • 2021 was a significant year in the continued global shift away from new coal power:
    • With multiple countries making significant public commitments to pivot their energy futures and swathes of pre-construction coal capacity cancelled.
  • EU based study:
    • The European Union’s 27 member states retired a record 12.9 GW in 2021, with the most retirements in Germany (5.8 GW), Spain (1.7 GW), and Portugal (1.9 GW).
    • Portugal became coal free in 2021, nine years before its targeted 2030 phase-out date.
  • Fall in coal plant capacity:
    • There has been a 77% fall in coal plant capacity in pre-construction since the Paris Agreement was signed in 2015.

India Specific Outcomes

  • India’s aim is to achieve net-zero emissions by 2070 and also pledged to attain 500 GW of installed electricity capacity from non-fossil fuel sources by 2030.
  • Climate justice: India has also insisted that its right to use coal be recognised in the context of principles of climate justice.
  • Coal power capacity decreased: From 2015 to 2021, pre-construction coal power capacity in the country decreased nearly 90%, from approximately 238.6 GW in 2015, to 36.6 GW in 2020 and down an additional 12.7 GW in 2021, to 23.8 GW.
  • Despite the phase-down of new coal: more than 23.8 GW of planned capacity remains, with more than half (12.6 GW or 52%) permitted; 31.3 GW under construction; and few if any plants with firm retirement dates.

Way forward

  • IPCC which showed there was no carbon budget left to accommodate new coal plants, and that coal use needed to fall by 75% by 2030 (from 2019 levels) to limit global temperature rise below 1.5 degrees Celsius, in line with the Paris Agreement.
  • The Environment Ministry has introduced more stringent pollution standards for coal plants in 2015, but the deadline to comply with the standards has been repeatedly delayed.

Coal in India

  • Coal is the main source of energy in India and is found in a form of sedimentary rocks and is often known as ‘Black Gold’.
  • It originates from organic matter wood. When large tracts of forests are buried under sediments, wood is burnt and decomposed due to heat from below and pressure from above.
  • The phenomenon makes coal but takes centuries to complete.
  • Coal can be classified based on carbon content as follows-
    • Anthracite: It is the best quality of coal which carries 80 to 95% carbon content.
      •  It has the highest calorific value.
      •  It is found in small quantities in Jammu and Kashmir.
    • Bituminous: It carries 60 to 80% of carbon content and a low level of moisture content. It is widely used and has a high calorific value. It is found in Jharkhand, West Bengal, Odisha, Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh.
    • Lignite: It is often brown. It carries 40 to 55% carbon content. It has high moisture content so it gives smoke when burnt. It is found in Rajasthan, Lakhimpur (Assam), and Tamil Nadu.
    • Peat: It has less than 40% carbon content. It has low calorific value and burns like wood.
  • Coal Consumption in India
    • India is 2nd largest importer, consumer and producer of coal, and has world’s 5th-largest reserves.
    • Majorly imports from: 
      • Indonesia, Australia and South Africa
    • Highest Coal reserves: 
      • Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh
    • Coal accounts for over 70% of India’s electricity output, and utilities account for about 75% of India’s coal consumption.

Source: TH

 
Previous article Scrutinising Death Penalty
Next article Hepatitis B