India’s thermal coal imports drop to 4-year low as green power rises

Trucks loaded with coal drive to the coal yard at the Deendayal Port in Kandla, in the western state of Gujarat, India, April 5, 2025. (Photo: Reuters/File)

NEW DELHI, June 18 (Reuters) – India’s thermal coal imports fell to a 4-year low in January-May due to higher local ​output and rising renewable energy generation, commodities consultancy BigMint said.

Overall, ‌thermal coal imports, at 65 million tons in the year till May, declined by an annual 12%, the consultancy said.

India, the world’s second-largest importer of thermal ​coal, has been seeking to reduce its reliance on ​imports and aims to cut the use of such coal for ⁠power generation by at least 30% this year.

The country’s top ​producer, Coal India had asked its subsidiaries to ramp up output as scorching ​temperatures due to the El Nino weather pattern increased electricity use.

Higher prices for imported coal and elevated freight rates due to the crisis in the Middle ​East also weighed on imports, BigMint said.

RISING RENEWABLE GENERATION

In January-May total ​power generation increased 5% from a year earlier, while renewable generation grew much ‌faster ⁠at 22%, BigMint said.

India’s peak power demand, a measure of the maximum electricity requirement, exceeded the country’s expectations of 270 gigawatts on May 21, driven by heat waves.

Power demand in the South Asian nation ​climbed 11.2% to ​a two-year high ⁠in May, data from federal grid regulator Grid-India showed.

Thermal power generation rose 10% from a year ​earlier in the month, the highest since May 2024, ​as utilities ⁠ramped up output to meet round-the-clock electricity demand, the regulator’s data showed.

During the month, India’s renewable power generation rose 29.31% from the previous ⁠year ​to 27.58 billion kilowatt-hours, accounting for a ​record 17.9% of the country’s power mix, according to a Reuters analysis of daily ​government data.