New Delhi: The Russia-Ukraine military conflict, which has increased energy prices globally, will reduce the propensity to import coal by power plants and will further hamper the supply of fuel to captive power plants and industries like steel, aluminium from state-owned Coal India, ICPPA said on Friday. According to the Indian Captive Power Producers Association (ICPPA), amid rising energy prices globally, electricity producers will pressurise the government for more domestic coal to fulfill their demand and this will adversely affect fuel supply to the non-power sector.
"This (Russia-Ukraine) crisis has increased energy prices globally and that reduces the propensity to import coal and coke. And it will further complicate the matter and it is going to hamper supplies to both CPPs and industries from Coal India," ICPPA Secretary General Rajiv Agarwal told the media. The industries like aluminum, cement, steel, sponge-iron, paper, fertiliser, chemical, rayon and their captive power plants (CPPs) are mostly dependent on domestic coal.
"From the last six-seven months we (CPPs) have been getting a very low supply of coal. Because of this crisis power plants... will have lower propensity to import and hence they will pressurise the system to give more and more coal to them by rail mode. That will stop or delay operationalisation of normalcy in rake supply to CPPs and industries," Agarwal said. The yearly supply of coal to the non-power sector is just eight per cent and still the non-regulated sector (NRS) is facing fuel shortages.