


Some portion of the fun is contending in the rankings and perform errands all through the world by the designer. Crossing the slants, we experience both as different players and to be set up for these difficulties (eg. We can go skiing or snowboarding and fly with a wingsuit or paraglider. India has a current installed generating capacity of 1,28,182MW.The makers have given broad regions of the Alps and Alaska, each isolated into a few substantial divisions. “The Central sector is expected to contribute 53% and the state sector 34%, with the balance being contributed by the private sector," the power ministry official said.įollowing the Central government’s success in getting private participation in two ultra mega power plants, the governments of various states are now in the process of launching their own large power projects. The 68,870MW target is expected to be largely met by the Central sector or plants that are owned by public sector companies controlled by the Central government. Out of the 68,870MW capacity addition that is expected over the next five years, 16,000MW will come from hydropower projects, 46,600MW from coal-based ones, 1,400MW from lignite projects, 2,100MW from gas-based projects and 3,160MW from nuclear power plants. If the 9.5% target for growth in generating capacity is not met, India could find it difficult to sustain its current pace of economic growth. It is, however, expected to come down towards the end of the current financial year," he said. “During 2006-07 (till January 2007), the growth rate in power generation was 7.6%.

He added that the “real picture" would emerge only in 2012, at the end of the Eleventh Plan.Ī senior official at the power ministry pointed out that the current year’s performance had been better. “The 9.5% target sounds very ambitious as the growth rate in generation was only around 5.2% during 2002-06," said an analyst who did not wish to be named. Between 19, power generating capacity grew by 3.2%.

Still, the 5.2% rate at which generating capacity has grown in this period is much higher than that at which it grew in the previous five-year period. That growth rate, however, is almost double the 5.1% compounded annual growth rate achieved between 20.Īt the end of the current plan period, in March 2007, the country would have added around 23,000MW of capacity, compared to a target of 41,000MW.
