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LOOKING BEYOND THAR COAL

The Accountant

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Looking beyond Thar coal
It may be reasonable to utilise Thar area for producing 10,000MW of solar power


SYED AKHTAR ALIOctober 04, 2021

the ministry emphasised the need for a comprehensive assessment of the sustainability of domestic resources such as natural gas and thar coal before restricting the use of imported fuels photo file

The ministry emphasised the need for a comprehensive assessment of the sustainability of domestic resources such as natural gas and Thar coal before restricting the use of imported fuels. PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD:
China has announced in international fora that it won’t finance any coal power plant project outside of China anymore.
This has sent shockwaves among stakeholders in Pakistan, who were counting on technology and finance from China to utilise the huge Thar coal deposits of 185 billion tons.
China has already built a 660-megawatt power plant in Thar and is in the process of building another power plant along with a coalmine with a capacity of 1,320MW.
There are several other Thar coal projects in the pipeline, all based on technology and finance from China.
China has also built three power plants in Pakistan based on imported coal. There are other project ideas and proposals regarding coal gasification to produce diesel, gas, fertiliser and chemicals, on which considerations are at various stages.
Hopefully, China would honour its existing commitments to Thar coal, which unfortunately are not much beyond the two projects – one already constructed (SECMC 660MW) and the other under construction (SSRL 1,320MW).
Coal is not used in power sector alone in Pakistan, which is a relatively recent phenomenon. Cement sector is using mostly imported coal along with some sub-bituminous coal produced in underground coalmines in Balochistan.
Before the advent of coal-based power plants, Pakistan imported 10.7 million tons in 2017, and almost all of that went to the cement sector. Cement sector’s installed production capacity is projected to grow to 100 million tons per annum (mtpa) from the existing 55 mtpa.
Thus, cement sector’s demand for coal is going to be 20 mtpa in the near to mid-term. Cement sector is vital both for domestic construction industry and for exports.
Thus, total imported coal demand for both power and cement sectors, which appears to be touching 25 mtpa, will go up to 35 mtpa.
Based on average price of $100 per ton, the total annual import bill for 25 mtpa of coal will be $2.5 billion.
There is no economic fuel for producing cement other than coal. Cheap local gas had been used earlier for producing cement. Rising gas prices and depleting local gas resources have forced cement producers to shift to coal.
Unfortunately, now both gas (LNG) and coal are expensive. Coal prices have gone as high as $146 per ton from $70 earlier. LNG prices are exceeding $36 per million British thermal units (mmbtu), which is absolutely uneconomic and unaffordable.
READ Coalmine policy for Balochistan on the cards
In this context, local coal production appears to be cheaper and viable. Although there has been controversy over Thar coal production costs, there have been recent estimates of $30 per ton, which is equivalent to $60 per ton for imported coal. Thar lignite coal is one half in calorific value than the imported coal.
Lignite may not be an ideal fuel for cement production as it contains 40-50% moisture. However, it can be pre-processed to fire in cement kilns.
A 20 mtpa demand for imported coal from the cement sector will be tantamount to 40 mtpa of Thar lignite. Add another 10 mtpa for other sectors, it adds up to 50 mtpa of Thar coal demand for other than the power sector.
If this import is replaced, one could save $2 billion. It is, therefore, vital to establish Thar lignite mines of 50 mtpa over the next five years, even if we forget about the use of Thar coal in power sector.
It may be plausible that the announcement of China is restricted to coal-based power plants only and there is no bar on the use of coal in other sectors such as cement.


Pakistan should also start developing indigenous mine development and operating capacity. There is now some experience already in this respect.

Chinese government may be more than willing to transfer technology in this sector, now (by reducing its direct exposure in terms of operations and finance) that it wants to improve its international image among the climate lobby of the world.

Coal power expensive

It should be noted that coal power, whether based on local or imported coal, is expensive at 8.5 US cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) while renewable energy like solar is available at less than 4 US cents.

READ Thar coal project to be audited

International prices have gone down to even 2 cents and lesser. There is forecast for solar power going as low as 1 cent, although storage cost could double it.

The issue is how to manage the transition and avoid stranded investment. Chinese decision may ultimately prove to be a blessing in disguise. Thar area of 10,000 square km can generate 400 gigawatts of solar electricity based on 25 square km per GW.

By comparison, the Indicative Generation Capacity Expansion Plan (IGCEP) predicts 55-75GW of generating capacity by 2030. Although all electricity cannot be produced in one location, it may be reasonable to plan 5-10,000MW of solar power in Thar area.

With LNG price uncertainties, depleting local gas resources, and stoppages on coal power, very little options will be left for adding base load power plants.

Hydro is a base load power plant but it does not run in winters. Nuclear is expensive and takes a long time to materialise. There is a lot of politics involved in it too.

Furnace oil seems to be re-emerging. We may have to adopt go-slow and wait-and-see approach to closing down/conversion of furnace oil production, till the dust settles.

We should not repeat the same mistake of total foreign reliance. A local solar equipment production industry plan should be developed, not only for producing solar PV panels but other items such as inverters, etc as well.

Incentives

An incentive programme should be prepared, encouraging the local manufacturing industry. After all, huge incentives in the form of customs tariff have been given to the automotive industry. And now, there are proposals for 10% price protection for the refinery sector.

There is ample scope for incentives when coal-based electricity tariff of 8.5 US cents is compared with less than 4 cents for solar power.

As of today, no energy source is a panacea. Solar is available during the day time only while hydro and wind are available in summer. Fossil fuels such as oil and gas are exhaustible and subject to price variations, while coal is dirty and bad for the environment and climate.

The days of energy utopia are not too far ahead into 2040-50. World is moving towards the solar-wind-hydrogen chain. Hydrogen will make energy transportable and tradable across national boundaries. We have to start moving in that direction.

The writer is former member energy of the Planning Commission and author of several books in the energy sector



Published in The Express Tribune, October 4th, 2021


 
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We should invest more in hydro and nuclear, the most reliable forms of clean energy, unlike solar and wind that depend on the weather.
 
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Almost all of the coal plants built in Pakistan within past 15 years are designed to run only on imported coal.

The PPP & PML(N) governments never negotiated the option to use Thar Coal in those coal power plants when Thar Coal does become available in abundance. Therefore cost of electricity generated from imported coal is also on the mercy of price of imported coal and exchange rate of USD.

Thank you Bilawal & Nawaj.
 
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We should invest more in hydro and nuclear, the most reliable forms of clean energy, unlike solar and wind that depend on the weather.

Also the most expensive.

There are many new clean coal technologies that can be implemented with almost zero GHG emissions. Such as carbon capture and storage.

Current coal prices are skyrocketing due to demand and lack of supply.
Almost all of the coal plants built in Pakistan within past 15 years are designed to run only on imported coal.

The PPP & PML(N) governments never negotiated the option to use Thar Coal in those coal power plants when Thar Coal does become available in abundance. Therefore cost of electricity generated from imported coal is also on the mercy of price of imported coal and exchange rate of USD.

Thank you Bilawal & Nawaj.

A symbol of corruption and criminal conspiracy to undermine Pakistan.
 
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Almost all of the coal plants built in Pakistan within past 15 years are designed to run only on imported coal.

The PPP & PML(N) governments never negotiated the option to use Thar Coal in those coal power plants when Thar Coal does become available in abundance. Therefore cost of electricity generated from imported coal is also on the mercy of price of imported coal and exchange rate of USD.

Thank you Bilawal & Nawaj.
Coal in pakistan is not top grade quality and have much sulphur in it. Need huge amount of water may be thats the reason
 
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Coal in pakistan is not top grade quality and have much sulphur in it. Need huge amount of water may be thats the reason

If you have plants in That itself than through a jugaar you can make it work
 
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Coal in pakistan is not top grade quality and have much sulphur in it. Need huge amount of water may be thats the reason


Coal power plants built by local companies such as Engro & Fauji Foundation can use Thar Coal. Because local companies know they have to be doing business in the country even 30 - 50 years from now.

However power plants built by overseas companies ( such as Hub & Port Qasim plants) can be operated only on imported coal because electricity generated by foreign companies would be purchased by Pakistan government under sovereign guarantee, so they do not care about the source or cost of coal being used. Lutto & Phutto.

They are also some tiny coal power plants built by local companies (to run their own factories) such as DG Khan Cement, Sitara Chemical & Master Power which can use domestic coal but these plants are less than 30 MW in capacity.
 
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I guess the 10th CPEC JCC had some clauses about Chinese assistance in setting up PV solar panels and the semiconductor industry in Pakistan. The writer has highlighted a very pressing issue by talking about the free-falling tariffs of solar energy worldwide. If we do not catch this train today, we will regret it later as we regret about most things in Pakistan. Someone should put this in the ears of Imran Khan, who makes tall statements about the environment all the time. Manufacturing solar panels at a large scale would minimize the need to import these and reduce the setup costs of the projects. Time is of the essence. Our industry craves competitive energy tariffs to become more competitive with global peers. There should be swift movement on this front.
 
.
I guess the 10th CPEC JCC had some clauses about Chinese assistance in setting up PV solar panels and the semiconductor industry in Pakistan. The writer has highlighted a very pressing issue by talking about the free-falling tariffs of solar energy worldwide. If we do not catch this train today, we will regret it later as we regret about most things in Pakistan. Someone should put this in the ears of Imran Khan, who makes tall statements about the environment all the time. Manufacturing solar panels at a large scale would minimize the need to import these and reduce the setup costs of the projects. Time is of the essence. Our industry craves competitive energy tariffs to become more competitive with global peers. There should be swift movement on this front.
Someone needs to talk about it consistently
Good idea
 
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Looking beyond Thar coal
It may be reasonable to utilise Thar area for producing 10,000MW of solar power


SYED AKHTAR ALIOctober 04, 2021

the ministry emphasised the need for a comprehensive assessment of the sustainability of domestic resources such as natural gas and thar coal before restricting the use of imported fuels photo file

The ministry emphasised the need for a comprehensive assessment of the sustainability of domestic resources such as natural gas and Thar coal before restricting the use of imported fuels. PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD:
China has announced in international fora that it won’t finance any coal power plant project outside of China anymore.
This has sent shockwaves among stakeholders in Pakistan, who were counting on technology and finance from China to utilise the huge Thar coal deposits of 185 billion tons.
China has already built a 660-megawatt power plant in Thar and is in the process of building another power plant along with a coalmine with a capacity of 1,320MW.
There are several other Thar coal projects in the pipeline, all based on technology and finance from China.
China has also built three power plants in Pakistan based on imported coal. There are other project ideas and proposals regarding coal gasification to produce diesel, gas, fertiliser and chemicals, on which considerations are at various stages.
Hopefully, China would honour its existing commitments to Thar coal, which unfortunately are not much beyond the two projects – one already constructed (SECMC 660MW) and the other under construction (SSRL 1,320MW).
Coal is not used in power sector alone in Pakistan, which is a relatively recent phenomenon. Cement sector is using mostly imported coal along with some sub-bituminous coal produced in underground coalmines in Balochistan.
Before the advent of coal-based power plants, Pakistan imported 10.7 million tons in 2017, and almost all of that went to the cement sector. Cement sector’s installed production capacity is projected to grow to 100 million tons per annum (mtpa) from the existing 55 mtpa.
Thus, cement sector’s demand for coal is going to be 20 mtpa in the near to mid-term. Cement sector is vital both for domestic construction industry and for exports.
Thus, total imported coal demand for both power and cement sectors, which appears to be touching 25 mtpa, will go up to 35 mtpa.
Based on average price of $100 per ton, the total annual import bill for 25 mtpa of coal will be $2.5 billion.
There is no economic fuel for producing cement other than coal. Cheap local gas had been used earlier for producing cement. Rising gas prices and depleting local gas resources have forced cement producers to shift to coal.
Unfortunately, now both gas (LNG) and coal are expensive. Coal prices have gone as high as $146 per ton from $70 earlier. LNG prices are exceeding $36 per million British thermal units (mmbtu), which is absolutely uneconomic and unaffordable.
READ Coalmine policy for Balochistan on the cards
In this context, local coal production appears to be cheaper and viable. Although there has been controversy over Thar coal production costs, there have been recent estimates of $30 per ton, which is equivalent to $60 per ton for imported coal. Thar lignite coal is one half in calorific value than the imported coal.
Lignite may not be an ideal fuel for cement production as it contains 40-50% moisture. However, it can be pre-processed to fire in cement kilns.
A 20 mtpa demand for imported coal from the cement sector will be tantamount to 40 mtpa of Thar lignite. Add another 10 mtpa for other sectors, it adds up to 50 mtpa of Thar coal demand for other than the power sector.
If this import is replaced, one could save $2 billion. It is, therefore, vital to establish Thar lignite mines of 50 mtpa over the next five years, even if we forget about the use of Thar coal in power sector.
It may be plausible that the announcement of China is restricted to coal-based power plants only and there is no bar on the use of coal in other sectors such as cement.


Pakistan should also start developing indigenous mine development and operating capacity. There is now some experience already in this respect.

Chinese government may be more than willing to transfer technology in this sector, now (by reducing its direct exposure in terms of operations and finance) that it wants to improve its international image among the climate lobby of the world.

Coal power expensive

It should be noted that coal power, whether based on local or imported coal, is expensive at 8.5 US cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) while renewable energy like solar is available at less than 4 US cents.

READ Thar coal project to be audited

International prices have gone down to even 2 cents and lesser. There is forecast for solar power going as low as 1 cent, although storage cost could double it.

The issue is how to manage the transition and avoid stranded investment. Chinese decision may ultimately prove to be a blessing in disguise. Thar area of 10,000 square km can generate 400 gigawatts of solar electricity based on 25 square km per GW.

By comparison, the Indicative Generation Capacity Expansion Plan (IGCEP) predicts 55-75GW of generating capacity by 2030. Although all electricity cannot be produced in one location, it may be reasonable to plan 5-10,000MW of solar power in Thar area.

With LNG price uncertainties, depleting local gas resources, and stoppages on coal power, very little options will be left for adding base load power plants.

Hydro is a base load power plant but it does not run in winters. Nuclear is expensive and takes a long time to materialise. There is a lot of politics involved in it too.

Furnace oil seems to be re-emerging. We may have to adopt go-slow and wait-and-see approach to closing down/conversion of furnace oil production, till the dust settles.

We should not repeat the same mistake of total foreign reliance. A local solar equipment production industry plan should be developed, not only for producing solar PV panels but other items such as inverters, etc as well.

Incentives

An incentive programme should be prepared, encouraging the local manufacturing industry. After all, huge incentives in the form of customs tariff have been given to the automotive industry. And now, there are proposals for 10% price protection for the refinery sector.

There is ample scope for incentives when coal-based electricity tariff of 8.5 US cents is compared with less than 4 cents for solar power.

As of today, no energy source is a panacea. Solar is available during the day time only while hydro and wind are available in summer. Fossil fuels such as oil and gas are exhaustible and subject to price variations, while coal is dirty and bad for the environment and climate.

The days of energy utopia are not too far ahead into 2040-50. World is moving towards the solar-wind-hydrogen chain. Hydrogen will make energy transportable and tradable across national boundaries. We have to start moving in that direction.

The writer is former member energy of the Planning Commission and author of several books in the energy sector



Published in The Express Tribune, October 4th, 2021



Coal prices have crossed $200, our LNG import bill is >500m in September. Cement prices are going to go up by 25-30Rs.

Thar coal has a lot more potential than renewable, Gas production and subsequent fertiliser industry, diesel production, cement industry.
If Thar coal cost is brought down to $25/ton we can produce gas from it at $6-7 per mmbtu. Also diesel at internationally competitive rates. We could have had unlimited supply of fuel and save forex to a tune of billions of dollars each year.

Thar coal should have been our priority instead of imported LNG and coal. No one will hold the people responsible accountable. Dr Samar Mubarak was made fun off when he pointed out balant corruption in deals and how funds were deliberately withheld to promote and make case for imported fuels. What was done to this country energy sector is far beyond treason which will hurt us for decades.

We are dependant on these imported fuel IPP for along time. Even if we shift to renewable energy we still have to pay them capacity charges. Afterwards a number of hydro projects are underway which will come online in a decade.
 
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I guess the 10th CPEC JCC had some clauses about Chinese assistance in setting up PV solar panels and the semiconductor industry in Pakistan.

Sigh ..... Its difficult to scale up solar project at this time. Example below.

Largest solar panel farm in Pakistan, with huge foot print & no production at night --> 400 MW
(and some say its a stretch, its actually close to 350 MW)

Largest nuclear power plant in Pakistan (single reactor) -> 1000 - 1100MW

Largest Coal power plant in Pakistan -> 1300 MW

Tarbella Dam capacity --> more than 4000 MW
 
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We should invest more in hydro and nuclear
First of all, the term "we" should be clear. Who is/are "we"? Does "we" also includes the people of thar? And also, why projects working in "other" provinces become "national".
 
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First of all, the term "we" should be clear. Who is/are "we"? Does "we" also includes the people of thar? And also, why projects working in "other" provinces become "national".
Pakistan as a nation, coal is a dead end that only brings suffering and death, from the mine to the plant.
 
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Sigh ..... Its difficult to scale up solar project at this time. Example below.

Largest solar panel farm in Pakistan, with huge foot print & no production at night --> 400 MW
(and some say its a stretch, its actually close to 350 MW)

Largest nuclear power plant in Pakistan (single reactor) -> 1000 - 1100MW

Largest Coal power plant in Pakistan -> 1300 MW

Tarbella Dam capacity --> more than 4000 MW
That is why we should begin looking towards domestic manufacturing of PV cells. Achieve scale domestically to reduce prices even if it needs out-of-the-way government support in the shape of tax breaks, free land to set up plants, no import duties on manufacturing machinery, etc. Rely as much as possible on domestic technology for setting up solar farms. This investment is like investing at a constant pace for prolonged periods on large civil infrastructure like dam construction. Of course, dams give you the added advantage in the shape of storing water and increasing the size of arable land, but your industry is reeling under high power tariffs, lowering these tariffs has to be a priority to promote industrialization.

Such steps are required or we would lose the train. Countries shifting sooner to solar would drastically reduce energy input costs for their domestic industries while improving people's living standards by slashing utility bill expenditures and electrifying communities. Secondly, there is an urgent need to switch to electricity for household heating to save forex spending on the purchase of expensive LNG. Reduction in power tariffs could encourage increased electricity uptake for the purpose of cooking/heating etc in household settings.
 
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