Indianext
Subscribe
  • News
    • Project Watch
    • Policy
  • Energy Next
    • Clean Energy
    • Energy Storage
    • E-Vehicles
  • AI Next
  • Health Next
    • Tele Medicine
    • Mental Wellbeing
  • People
    • Interviews
    • Profiles
  • Companies
  • TOP 10
  • Make In India
    • State News
    • Solutions
  • Market
    • Reports
    • Data
  • About Us
    • Mission
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Project Watch
    • Policy
  • Energy Next
    • Clean Energy
    • Energy Storage
    • E-Vehicles
  • AI Next
  • Health Next
    • Tele Medicine
    • Mental Wellbeing
  • People
    • Interviews
    • Profiles
  • Companies
  • TOP 10
  • Make In India
    • State News
    • Solutions
  • Market
    • Reports
    • Data
  • About Us
    • Mission
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Indianext
No Result
View All Result
Home Energynext

Study shows why India should increase renewable energy target of 2030

March 24, 2021
Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on whatsapp
Study shows why India should increase renewable energy target of 2030

Study shows why India should increase renewable energy target of 2030

Researchers at UC Santa Barbara have just released a study that demonstrates why India should double down on renewables.

The study examines electricity and carbon mitigation costs associated with achieving aggressive renewable energy targets in India’s electricity grid in 2030, and finds that wind-majority or balanced wind-solar targets have the most cost-effective potential for power in India.

Researcher Ranjit Deshmukh, and co-authors Duncan Callaway and Amol Phadke, reveal in a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that building significant numbers of wind and solar plants (600 GW) will reduce how often fossil fuel power plants must run.

This will hold India’s 2030 electricity emissions at its 2018 level, at costs comparable to a fossil fuel-dominated grid while nearly doubling the supply of electricity.

As costs decrease, battery storage can cost-effectively avert the need for new fossil fuel power plants. These findings stem from an exhaustive analysis of India’s power usage, weather patterns and energy infrastructure.

The Indian government set a target of 450 gigawatts of renewable energy capacity by 2030. For comparison, the country’s total energy generation capacity today is about 380 gigawatts, out of which 90 gigawatts are of renewable energy, not including large hydropower stations.

According to the Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW), India would need to generate at least 83 per cent of its electricity from (non-hydropower) renewable energy sources in order to reach net-zero by 2050.

However, mitigating carbon emissions is only one concern when it comes to developing countries like India.

“Most of these countries have low historical carbon emissions compared to more industrialized countries,” said Deshmukh, an assistant professor in the Environmental Studies Program who leads the Clean Energy Transformation Lab.

“So, the approach we take is that if renewable energy makes economic sense, then those countries should deploy more of it.”

Because the costs of wind and solar, as well as battery storage, are dropping so rapidly, Deshmukh explained, it’s actually cost-effective to install these technologies instead of conventional fossil fuel technologies, like coal and natural gas, regardless of environmental considerations.

Renewable energy has become cheaper than conventional energy sources simply by avoiding the cost of fuel that would otherwise need to be mined or, in the case of natural gas, imported to generate the same electricity.

Based on his simulation of a few hundred scenarios, Deshmukh and his colleagues contend that India could increase its target to 600 GW of renewable capacity by 2030 and increase the cost to its consumers by only a small amount — or in many cases actually decrease the cost.

Batteries are becoming a cost-effective tool for smoothing differences between energy supply and demand. They can store clean energy for times of peak demand, averting the need to call on conventional power plants, especially the expensive ones that will be operated infrequently.

Without this ability to store and shift energy, renewables may not be able to prevent the need for building new coal and natural gas power plants if India hopes to meet peak demand.

Fortunately, prices are already becoming so low that it will soon be less expensive to install batteries to store energy when demand is low compared to increasing power production when demand is high.

This will shift economic factors even more toward renewable energy.

Source-energy.economictimes.indiatimes.com

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Editors Corner

What is Natural Language Processing (NLP)?

Important things that you should look in an AI startup before investing

Reducing risks with Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Recommended News

Editors Corner

What is Natural Language Processing (NLP)?

Natural Language Processing (NLP) is...

by India Next
April 14, 2021
Uncategorized

Timex Fit Smartwatch With Telemedicine Feature, Temperature Sensor Launched in India

Timex Fit health monitoring smartwatch...

by India Next
April 14, 2021
AI Next

Artificial Intelligence grows as a ripe theme in Indian cinema: From OK Computer, Anukul to Enthiran, Andorid Kunjapan

Artificial Intelligence has grown in...

by India Next
April 14, 2021
Energy Storage

Maharashtra gets India’s first floating LNG storage and regasification unit

The LNG terminal is located...

by India Next
April 14, 2021

Related Posts

Maharashtra gets India's first floating LNG storage and regasification unit
Energy Storage

Maharashtra gets India’s first floating LNG storage and regasification unit

April 14, 2021
India, US to pursue ways to deepen their partnership on clean energy
Clean Energy

India, US to pursue ways to deepen their partnership on clean energy

April 12, 2021
Can India catch-up with the rest of Asia in EV production?
E-Vehicles

Can India catch-up with the rest of Asia in EV production?

April 8, 2021
Four policy issues to consider for electric vehicles in India
Uncategorized

Four policy issues to consider for electric vehicles in India

April 8, 2021
Load More
Next Post
India's adoption of Alternative Fuel Vehicles to remain limited till 2026: Moody's

Use renewable sources to charge electric vehicles in India

IndiaNext, over the last decade emerged as South Asia’s leading information portal on frontier technologies in the energy sector.

Recent Posts

What is Natural Language Processing (NLP)?

Timex Fit Smartwatch With Telemedicine Feature, Temperature Sensor Launched in India

Artificial Intelligence grows as a ripe theme in Indian cinema: From OK Computer, Anukul to Enthiran, Andorid Kunjapan

Maharashtra gets India’s first floating LNG storage and regasification unit

The Top 20 Machine Learning Startups To Watch In 2021

Tags

  • Mental WellBeing
  • Clean Energy
  • AI Next
  • Tele Medicine

Follow us

  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • Twitter
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Project Watch
    • Policy
  • Energy Next
    • Clean Energy
    • Energy Storage
    • E-Vehicles
  • AI Next
  • Health Next
    • Tele Medicine
    • Mental Wellbeing
  • People
    • Interviews
    • Profiles
  • Companies
  • TOP 10
  • Make In India
    • State News
    • Solutions
  • Market
    • Reports
    • Data
  • About Us
    • Mission
    • Contact Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Join Our Newsletter

Get daily access to news updates

no spam, we hate it more than you!