India's peak power deficit hits 10-year high: Report
Capacity addition of 3,765 megawatts in the first seven months of the financial year to March 2008 was just 32 per cent of the target, media reported on Friday, citing official figures.
Capacity addition of 3,765 megawatts in the first seven months of the financial year to March 2008 was just 32 per cent of the target, media reported on Friday, citing official figures.
India faces a chronic power crunch that is viewed as a major threat to its fast-growing economy.
India's government has further scaled down its expected power capacity addition in the current year to 12,000 megawatts from 17,000 megawatts, the newspaper said.
"We may actually add no more than 10,000 megawatts this year," the newspaper quoted an unnamed power ministry official as saying.
Capacity addition was unable to keep pace with demand due to lack of equipment and manpower, the official said.
Worst hit are industrialised states like Maharashtra and Gujarat in western India where the region posted a peak shortage of 26.6 per cent in October, the paper said.
The government aims to invest 250 billion dollars in power infrastructure comprising generation, transmission and distribution by 2012.
But experts say capacity addition should be accompanied by power reforms, especially those aimed at cutting transmission and distribution losses and rampant power theft.
The government has been promoting 4,000-megawatt "ultra mega" power projects to boost power supply in the country of 1.1 billion where 412 million people have no electricity.
India requires 1.25 trillion dollars of investment in energy infrastructure by 2030 to meet its economic needs, the International Energy Agency says.
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