THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 24 October 2018 (An agenda for energy)

An agenda for energy

Mains Paper: 3 | Economy
Prelims level: Infrastructure
Mains level: India needs to bring structural changes, reset targets, influence global policy and choices.

Context

  •  The use of machines in a factory, appliances like washing machines and refrigerators in households that help save time on chores, or automobiles to move people and goods faster, energy is needed to grow output.

  • Even the use of materials like metals, plastics, chemicals, bricks and cement, without which a decent quality of life is now hard to imagine, means use of more energy.

  •  The production of steel accounts for nearly 9 per cent of India’s total energy needs, and brick-making is the second largest industrial use of energy.

  •  Put simply, an un-electrified house with mud walls and a thatched roof only needs manual energy to build, but a brick-and-cement house needs much more.

  •  Energy consumption per person for a country is correlated to its average output per person.

Requirements for high productivity

  •  Higher productivity also needs denser energy. Grass, for example, has lower energy density than cooking gas.

  •  Cooking a bowl of rice by burning straws would take a lot more time than by using a gas cylinder.

  • While traditional societies across the world all relied on biomass (that is, sources like firewood and crop residue, which are less-dense), their growth in productivity was associated with a move to denser fuels.

  •  Imagine running a car directly with coal or wheat-straw.

  •  It is said that the transition of the fuel for ships from the less-dense coal to the higher-density oil contributed to the success of the British navy in the First World War.

  •  In the early 1990s, biomass was 30 per cent of China’s energy, but is only 5 per cent now.

  •  India’s ratio currently is 30 per cent, but should start to fall as household electrification picks up, and government policy raises the penetration of cooking gas cylinders.

Challenges for India

  •  The Indian economy’s energy needs will rise with growth, and demand for denser energy sources will grow even faster.

  • Between 2000 and 2015, when India’s output (as measured by GDP) grew at 7 per cent a year, its energy demand grew at 4.5 per cent a year, implying that efficiency of energy use improved at about 2.5 per cent annually.

  •  The problem was that the annual growth in domestic production of energy was only 3 per cent, and imports therefore had to grow at 8.5 per cent to meet the demand.

  •  The share of energy needs met through imports rose from 21 per cent in 2000 to 36 per cent by 2015.

  •  The main constraint in India is the lack of reserves of oil, gas and metallurgical coal (used for steel-making), but poor management of what India does have is also a reason.

Is importing large amounts of energy is a solution?

  •  Importing large amounts of energy is by itself not a problem except possibly for security reasons one can imagine the problems of this vulnerability in times of war.

  • But the energy import bill this year is already at a record high of $125 billion, despite energy prices being half of what they were at the peak a decade back.

  •  Volume growth has more than offset the price decline.

  •  Three years from now, even if the recent surge in prices reverses, the value of energy imports would be nearly $40 billion higher than this year.

  •  By 2040, even with minimal price growth, the import bill could be $660 billion.

  •  As a share of national income, this will most likely be a manageably low number, but the constraint would be in getting that quantum of dollars.

Other challenges

  •  The fact that India may struggle to pay for the energy it needs to grow the economy at even 7 per cent a year is concerning, and challenges the widely held view that 8 per cent growth is just around the corner.

  • Structural changes on several fronts may be necessary to overcome these hurdles.

  •  Improve capital inflows, grow domestic energy production, increase energy efficiency, and also accelerate the transition to more domestic sources of energy.

  •  High priority should be freeing up energy pricing, not just in electricity but also coal and gas.

  •  Controlled and distorted pricing drives inefficiency in usage, and also inhibits a supply response at times like now, when rupee depreciation has made domestic energy so much cheaper than imported energy.

  •  The legal monopoly of Coal India on merchant mining of coal was unwound a few years back, but no licences have been issued yet to private enterprises.

  •  The country also needs to collectively move away from carting its low-grade coal over hundreds of kilometres instead of moving power, which is cheaper, easier and less wasteful.

Way out

  •  This would need national-level planning.

  • The ambition on solar and wind power may need to be reset substantially upwards: Even if solar and wind capacity reaches 650 Gigawatts by 2040 (a nine-fold increase from now).

  •  They would only be able to cater to 4 per cent of India’s energy needs that year.

  •  Given the scale of required capacity, self-sufficiency in such equipment should also be sought.

  •  Further, given the natural fluctuations in output from renewable sources, the grid would need to be re-planned/architected.

  •  India also needs to accelerate electrification of various energy-guzzlers.

  •  Electric vehicles are expected to be just 6 per cent of cars globally by 2030.

  •  This may be too slow for Indian requirements.

Conclusion

  •  India is expected to drive almost a fourth of global energy demand in the next two decades.

  • Not only should it be pulling its weight on global forums and influence global policy and choices something that is beginning to happen.

  •  There needs to be significant investment in India-specific solutions.

  •  The country’s medium-term growth potential could otherwise be at risk.
     

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1) Which one of the following is a purpose of UDAN, a scheme of the Government?

a) Regional connectivity scheme
b) Financial inclusion
c) Providing technical and financial assistance to start-up entrepreneurs in the field of renewable sources of energy
d) Providing for financial turnaround and revival of power distribution companies
Answer: A

Mains Questions:
Q.1) Is importing large amounts of energy is a solution? Give your arguments in your answer.