India Pushes Back Flexible Coal Power Plan Amid Cost Uncertainty

India is delaying a plan to have coal-fired power plants operate at reduced rates when solar generation is at its highest, due to uncertainties about how to compensate coal plants for running at minimum levels, according to minutes from government meetings reviewed by Reuters.

India, which relies on coal for about 60% of its power generation, has seen booming solar capacity additions in recent years and plans a massive buildout to quadruple solar capacity by 2035.  

As the country looks to have more of this solar capacity contributing to power output, the government has been considering curtailing generation from coal-fired plants under a coal flexibility plan.

However, the coal power plants would need to be compensated for reducing their utilization rates to 40% from 55%, and authorities are not sure how. Separately, the industry is concerned about the coal plants’ safety operations with these reduced rates and about the investment they would have to pour into making such plants flexible-generation facilities, per the documents and minutes Reuters’ reporters have reviewed.

India has thus shelved the ‘flexible coal’ plan for a year, as it has not come up with regulation about how the coal plants would be compensated for retrofitting and maintenance if they are supposed to run at 40% utilization rate, down from 55%. 

“India’s experience in 2025 signalled that limited system flexibility will present a growing barrier to solar integration without prudent planning,” green energy think tank Ember said in a report earlier this year.

Ember’s analysis showed that the system operator was not able to turn down non-solar generation sufficiently to fully accommodate midday solar while keeping enough coal capacity online to meet evening demand.

India last year hit a major milestone of having more than half of its power generation capacity coming from non-fossil fuels. Grid security reasons, however, led to a notable amount of renewable energy curtailed in 2025, Ember noted.

“The future ability of the Indian power system to absorb the constantly increasing midday renewable energy generation, especially solar, will depend on the deployment of flexibility solutions,” the think tank said.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Japan Urges IEA to Prepare for Second Emergency Oil Release

    Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi on Wednesday asked the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA) to be ready for an additional release of oil stocks from reserves if it…

    U.S. Waivers Spur Russian Oil Sales But Interest in Iran’s Crude Remains Low

    The U.S. waivers on the purchase of Russian and Iranian crude on tankers have been a mixed bag of success in boosting oil supply in Asia. While refiners, especially in…

    Have You Seen?

    CERAWeek UPDATE: US Shale Firms Unlikely to Drill at $100 a Barrel Unless High Prices Last Longer, Executives Say

    • March 25, 2026
    CERAWeek UPDATE: US Shale Firms Unlikely to Drill at $100 a Barrel Unless High Prices Last Longer, Executives Say

    Gas, Not Oil, Is Where US Energy Dominance Matters

    • March 25, 2026
    Gas, Not Oil, Is Where US Energy Dominance Matters

    Germany and South Korea Face Rare Earths Supply Shortage

    • March 25, 2026
    Germany and South Korea Face Rare Earths Supply Shortage

    U.S. Waivers Spur Russian Oil Sales But Interest in Iran’s Crude Remains Low

    • March 25, 2026
    U.S. Waivers Spur Russian Oil Sales But Interest in Iran’s Crude Remains Low

    Japan Urges IEA to Prepare for Second Emergency Oil Release

    • March 25, 2026
    Japan Urges IEA to Prepare for Second Emergency Oil Release

    Air Liquide ‘to reallocate’ helium from other regions after Qatar hit

    • March 25, 2026
    Air Liquide ‘to reallocate’ helium from other regions after Qatar hit

    Cement plants are viable high-grade CO2 source, says Linde

    • March 25, 2026
    Cement plants are viable high-grade CO2 source, says Linde

    Video | “CCU and CCS will completely change the rules of the game” – Nippon Gases

    • March 25, 2026
    Video | “CCU and CCS will completely change the rules of the game” – Nippon Gases

    Valero Prepares Restart of Port Arthur, Texas Oil Refinery After Blast, Sources Say

    • March 25, 2026
    Valero Prepares Restart of Port Arthur, Texas Oil Refinery After Blast, Sources Say

    Oil Falls as Reports of 15-Point Proposal Spurs Ceasefire Hopes

    • March 25, 2026
    Oil Falls as Reports of 15-Point Proposal Spurs Ceasefire Hopes