Wednesday 11 January 2017

National Energy Policy being drafted by Niti Aayog


National Energy Policy being drafted by Niti Aayog

Coal Ministry opposes NITI Aayog’s draft Energy Policy

NEW DELHI: Wary of losing Coal India’s pricing power, the Piyush Goyal-led Ministry of Coal has raised reservations over the draft National Energy Policy, which favours aligning domestic coal prices with international rates. The lack of consensus between the Centre and the ministry has delayed the policy, which has been in the works at NITI Aayog, the government’s thinktank, for more than a year now.
“There has been severe opposition from the top coal ministry officials to the policy as they don’t want markets to determine prices of coal in India,” a senior government official told ET on condition of anonymity.
According to the official, the ministry is scared of this forward-looking policy because it would lose control over coal prices and would no longer be able to maximise profit for Coal India.
Coal secretary Anil Swarup declined to comment on the matter.
State-run Coal India Ltd. is the country’s largest producer of the commodity, which it sells at prices approved by the company board.
The company produces 84% of India’s coal, according to its website. Due to a combination of lower international prices and inadequate domestic production, the value of India’s coal imports touched a high of $17.8 billion in FY15. Higher domestic production in FY16 lowered imports to $13.7 billion.

NITI Aayog’s National Energy Policy is aimed at curbing imports by increasing production of renewable energy in the country fivefold to 300 billion units by 2019 and tripling coal production to 1.5 billion tonnes. Coal imports are envisaged to come down by 10% by 2022 and by 50% by 2030.
“The draft National Energy Policy is ready and we have used the best possible inputs and the best possible expertise. We had extensive discussions will all secretaries and it will be uploaded shortly,” NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant told ET.
According to Kant, once inputs have been provided by everyone, it is not necessary to reach a consensus on all issues. “NITI Aayog is a think-tank. It must have differences.
If it were to have consensus on everything, NITI Aayog would have been miserably failing to do its job,” Kant said.
“We are advocating reforms, we are advocating changes, trying to push India to a higher growth trajectory and therefore differences are necessary and are obvious.
Wherever there are differences, we’ll pose them before the Prime Minister and let him take a call. The final call is with the PM, who is also the chairman of NITI Aayog,” Kant added. 

 Coal Ministry opposes NITI Aayog’s draft Energy Policy

source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/policy/coal-ministry-opposes-niti-aayogs-draft-energy-policy/articleshow/54907262.cms

India Energy Security Scenarios, 2047

http://niti.gov.in/content/niti%E2%80%99s-energy-sector-planning-tool-iess-2047


Energy and International Cooperation Vertical
(NITI Aayog)

http://niti.gov.in/writereaddata/files/document_publication/Conference%20Report_Final%20(V-13).pdf

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