Politique énergétique en Inde

Discussions traitant des diverses sources d'énergie ainsi que de leur efficacité.

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 04 oct. 2019, 09:10

Quand même
but some heavy machinery has been damaged.

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par phyvette » 04 oct. 2019, 09:25

Possible, mais il n'est question que de 5% de la production de Coal India, des machines il doit bien y en avoir en doublon dans le pays, c'est juste un problème de logistique, rien d'insurmontable en 10 jours pour un tiers de la production du site.

Les Saouds l'ont fait dans ce temps pour une part de 50% de la production Nationale.
Image Quand on a un javelin dans la main, tous les problèmes ressemblent à un T-72.

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par alain2908 » 04 oct. 2019, 13:28

energy_isere a écrit :
04 oct. 2019, 08:22
En Inde une des plus grosses mines de charbon à ciel ouvert est hors service pour cause d'inondation.
One of India’s largest coal mines is flooded, spelling more bad news for domestic output
Coal India, the state-owned monopoly miner which owns the Dipka mine, supplies over 80% of India’s domestic coal. Dipka alone has an annual output of more than 30 million tonnes, almost 5% of the firm’s total production.
Ca fait 5% de 80 % soit 4 % du flux qui est interrompu.
J'imagine qu'ils ont un peu de stock tampon et de capacité à augmenter sur les 96 % restant.

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 15 oct. 2019, 00:29

L'Inde engage 60 milliards de dollars dans l'infrastructure du gaz d'ici 2024.
India To Spend $60 Billion On Natural Gas Grid

By Irina Slav - Oct 14, 2019

India is planning to invest $60 billion in developing a national natural gas grid and building a number of import terminals, Reuters reports, adding that the plan is part of efforts to reduce emissions.

Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said the grid should be completed by 2024.

“I am not talking about potential investment. This number relates to the projects that are under execution,” Pradhan said at the India Energy Forum.

Reuters recalls that India’s gas demand was growing at a strong pace about 10 years ago, with the 2010 annual rate of increase reaching an impressive 11 percent. Since then, however, growth has slowed, reaching just 2.5 percent in financial 2018-2019. The reason is the same as the reason for China’s severe gas shortage a year ago: insufficient grid coverage.

BP’s Energy Outlook 2019 forecast that India’s carbon dioxide emissions will grow by 116 percent between 2017 and 2040, while primary energy consumption is expected to grow by 156 percent over the same period. Turning to gas is both cheaper than oil and less polluting when it comes to carbon dioxide.

According to BP, gas demand in India will soar by 240 percent by 2040, to 185 billion cu m annually. Most of this will continue to come from abroad as domestic production grows too slowly to satisfy demand.

In the current financial year, domestic gas production averaged a little over 90 million cu m daily, according to the Petroleum Ministry. Consumption, on the other hand, stood at 148 million cu m daily. LNG imports hit 91 million cu m daily in June.

No wonder, then, that India is in the focus of attention of all LNG producers. The development of a national gas grid will only boost the growth of demand and turn the country into an even more important export destination than it is now.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com
https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News ... -Grid.html

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 13 nov. 2019, 08:26

L'Inde veut du pétrole Russe pour se diversifier du pétrole du Moyen Orient.
Russia's Next Great Energy Ally

By Tsvetana Paraskova - Nov 12, 2019

Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), the biggest oil refiner in India, is discussing imports of crude oil from Russia with Russian oil giant Rosneft, IOC’s chairman Sanjiv Singh said on Tuesday.

IOC has so far imported insignificant volumes of oil from Russia, and is now looking to potentially boost its imports of Russian oil, Singh said at the ADIPEC energy conference in Abu Dhabi, as carried by Reuters.

“We are in discussion with Rosneft and we are hopeful that something should work,” IOC’s Singh said.

India, which relies on imports to meet 80-85 percent of its oil demand, aims to cut that reliance and diversify the sources of its crude oil imports to insulate itself from geopolitical risks. Around 60 percent of India’s current oil imports come from the Middle East.

Working with Russia could help India reduce its over-reliance on oil imports, India’s Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said last month.

India has been signing deals with Russia in the energy sector in recent months and years.

In September, Pradhan met in India with Rosneft’s chief executive Igor Sechin to discuss Russian-Indian cooperation in the energy industries in both countries. Indian companies reaffirmed their interest in participating in developing oil and gas projects in Russia, while Rosneft, in a consortium with other foreign investors, is considering investments in doubling the refining throughput of the Vadinar Refinery in India and expanding the retail presence in India of Rosneft-participated Nayara Energy.

Apart from cooperation in the energy sector, Rosneft also aims to boost its oil supplies to one of the fastest-growing demand centers, India.
.........
https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News ... -Ally.html

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 29 déc. 2019, 23:00

L'Inde devrait franchir 100 GW de capacité installée solaire PV plus éolien en 2020.
India set to cross 100 GW wind energy and solar power in 2020

December 27, 2019
......
https://www.evwind.es/2019/12/27/india- ... 2020/72783

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 13 janv. 2020, 08:37

La demande de l'Inde en pétrole ça croitr plus que tout autre grande économie, IEA.
India’s Oil Demand To Grow Faster Than Any Other Major Economy

By Tsvetana Paraskova - Jan 11, 2020

By 2040, India’s oil consumption is set to increase at the fastest pace than any major economy in the world as the country is becoming increasingly influential in global energy markets, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said in its first in-depth review of India’s energy policies launched on Friday.


India’s total energy demand is expected to double by 2040, while demand for electricity could even triple, due to the rising population and the fast-growing economy, the IEA said about India, which has been an IEA association country since March 2017.

Currently, India is the world’s third'slargest consumer of oil, the fourth largest oil refiner, and a net exporter of refined products. India’s oil demand growth rate is expected to surpass the growth pace of China in the middle of the 2020s, making India a very attractive market for refinery investment, according to IEA’s report.

India’s oil import dependency is set to rise significantly in coming decades, from an already high dependency of over 80 percent in 2018.

Therefore, India is making energy security a priority in its policies, the Paris-based agency said.

“India’s coal supply has increased rapidly since the early 2000s, and coal continues to be the largest domestic source of energy supply and electricity generation,” the IEA said.

At the same time, the agency highlighted the strong growth of renewable energy deployment across India, especially solar power.

At present, renewables account for nearly 23 percent of India’s total installed electricity generation capacity.

Last month, India’s Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said that India would surpass China to become the world’s largest energy growth driver by 2030.

Commenting on IEA’s report, Pradhan said on Friday:

“We have taken note of IEA’s recommendation for reinforcement of India’s oil emergency response policy. Enhancing international engagement on global oil security issues is already an active goal being pursued by my Ministry. Energy has become an essential commodity in our bilateral trade engagements with several key trading partners and in positioning India as an important strategic player in global energy landscape.”
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-Gene ... onomy.html

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 25 janv. 2020, 11:07

India installed 7.5 GW of solar power and 2.4 GW of wind energy in 2019

January 24, 2020

India’s renewable energy capacity increased to 86 GW in 2019, according to new figures from JMK Research & Analytics, with 7.5 GW of new utility-scale solar capacity being added, and 2.4 GW of new wind power capacity.
.........
https://www.evwind.es/2020/01/24/india- ... 2019/73225

Ça n'est jamais que 1.5 fois la somme de nouveau solaire PV plus éolien de l'Espagne que j'ai posté il y a 5 minutes.

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 04 févr. 2020, 07:58

Mise en service effective du nouveau terminal d'importation LNG de Mundra dans l'état de Gujarat. Un méthanier de Qatargas de 216000 m3 à accosté.
Qatargas delivers 'commissioning LNG cargo' to India’s newest Mundra Terminal

01 February 2020

Qatargas has supplied a commissioning liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargo for India’s newest LNG receiving terminal – Mundra, located on the west coast of India.

The cargo was loaded in Ras Laffan on January 17 on the Q-Flex LNG vessel, Murwab, with an overall cargo carrying capacity of 216,000 cubic metres. It arrived at Mundra terminal on January 22.

Mundra is the second LNG terminal that Qatargas helped commission in India within the past year. It followed an earlier commissioning cargo, which was delivered by the company to the Ennore LNG receiving terminal, near the southern Indian city of Chennai, in February 2019.

The Mundra terminal is located in Adani Ports and Special Economic zone in Kutch district of the western Indian state of Gujarat.

The terminal’s nominal capacity is 5mn tonnes of LNG per year (mtpy), and it can receive vessels with a capacity between 75,000 cubic metres and 260,000 cubic metres. The terminal comprises of two storage tanks – each with an overall capacity of 160,000 cubic metres.

Qatargas has established a strong partnership with India since July 1999 when it started supplying LNG to Petronet. Since then it has delivered more than 2,000 cargoes under its various long-term sales and purchase agreements as well as supplying significant volumes into the short term and spot markets.

India is a key market for Qatargas given its geographical proximity and growth potential. Upcoming developments such as new terminals and other gas related infrastructure will increase India’s capacity to import LNG from 30mn tpy to 44mn tpy, a 46% increase as India continues to make strides in achieving its ambitious target of 15% gas in the energy mix.
https://m.gulf-times.com/story/654754/Q ... o-to-India

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 18 juin 2020, 00:15

Adani va construire des usines de fabrication de cellules et panneaux solaires en Inde, pour 6 milliards de dollars.
India Takes Big Leap In Solar Development With $6 Billion Deal

By Ag Metal Miner - Jun 17, 2020

Adani Green Energy Ltd, a part of the diversified Adani Group, is expected to invest about U.S. $6 billion in the project, and create 400,000 direct and indirect jobs, it said in a stock market filing, according to India Climate Dialogue.

The company is also committed to see group company Adani Solar establish 2 GW of additional solar cell and module manufacturing capacity, according to the report.


Over its lifetime, the projects will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 900 million tons, the company said. The first 2 GW of solar generation capacity will be commissioned by 2022. The project will be in various locations, including a 2 GW single-site generation project, the company said.

Incidentally, Adani Solar, Waaree Energies and Risen Energy were the top three suppliers of solar modules in India in terms of shipments in the 2019 calendar year, according to Mercom India. The three firms accounted for approximately 25% of the total market share, according to findings released in Mercom India Research’s latest report, India Solar Market Leaderboard 2020.

Along with its existing 1.3 GW of manufacturing capacity, the new contract, according to reports, will further consolidate the group’s position as India’s largest solar manufacturing facility. It will, in fact, take Adani Green Energy closer to its target of achieving an installed generation capacity of 25 GW of renewable power by 2025, which will see it committing a total investment of U.S. $15 billion in the renewable energy space over the next five years.
.......
https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News ... -Deal.html

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 15 août 2020, 09:30

L'Inde atteint 37 GW de capacité de solaire PV.
India reached a cumulative installed PV capacity of 37 GW at the end of June, according to the report Q2 2020 India Solar Market Update from Mercom India.
https://www.pv-magazine.com/2020/08/14/ ... ops-37-gw/

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 02 sept. 2020, 13:35

L'Indian Railways veut développer 20 GW de solaire PV d'ici 2030 :
Indian Railways to develop 20GW of solar on vacant land by 2030

By Jules Scully Sep 01, 2020

Indian Railways has revealed plans to install 20GW of solar as it ramps up efforts to become a net-zero carbon emitter before 2030. The government-run company, which transports 8 billion passengers per year, said about 51,000 hectares of vacant land is available for solar developments.

Developers recently attended a meeting alongside Indian railways minister Piyush Goyal to discuss innovative solutions for setting up solar projects alongside railway tracks. Bids for 3GW of solar projects on vacant land parcels as well as sections of land alongside railway tracks have already been invited by the Ministry of Railways and Indian Railways joint venture (JV) entity Railway Energy Management Company.

To help in its objective of becoming 100% self-sustainable for all its power needs, Indian Railways has so far installed solar panels at more than 960 stations, including those at Varanasi, New Delhi, Jaipur, Secunderabad, Kolkata and Hyderabad. Orders have also been placed for 198MW of solar rooftop capacity for 550 additional stations.

The developments come after Indian Railways earlier this year announced plans to install 1GW of solar PV and 200MW of wind power by 2021-22 across its Zonal Railways and Production Units. By that deadline, the company will install 500MW across rooftops of its railway buildings, complemented with another 500MW of ground-mount PV.

Indian Railways also said this week it is set to achieve 100% electrification of its rail tracks by 2023
https://www.pv-tech.org/news/indian-rai ... nd-by-2030

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 09 oct. 2020, 08:16

La mer d'Andaman va être explorée pour les hydrocarbures.
Oil India begins exploration for oil and gas in Andaman sea

08 Oct 2020

Oil India said it has begun acquiring seismic data on the shallow water blocks AN-OSHP-2018/1 and AN-OSHP-2018/2, which the company had won in the third round of open acreage licensing policy
.......
https://www.livemint.com/companies/news ... 14612.html

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 15 déc. 2020, 22:53

Inde : le Premier ministre Narendra Modi lance un colossal parc d'énergies renouvelables de 30 GW

AFP parue le 15 déc. 2020

Le Premier ministre Narendra Modi a posé mardi la première pierre d'un futur parc d'énergies hybrides renouvelables, d'une capacité de de 30 gigawatts, dans l'État du Gujarat, qui sera, selon lui, "le plus vaste au monde".

Situé à Kutch, dans l'Etat natal de Modi (ouest), le projet énergétique - comprenant des panneaux solaires, des unités de stockage d'énergie solaire et des éoliennes - s'étendra sur 72 600 hectares, soit environ la superficie de Singapour. "Le parc d'énergies renouvelables hybrides sera le plus grand du monde", a souligné Modi lors de l'inauguration du parc énergétique ainsi que d'une usine de dessalement adjacente.

Le méga-complexe jouera un rôle clé pour que l'Inde parvienne à son ambitieux objectif de produire 175 GW d'énergie renouvelable d'ici 2022 et 450 GW d'ici 2030. Le parc doit permettre également à l'Inde de réduire ses émissions de dioxyde de carbone de 50 millions de tonnes par an, a précisé Modi.

L'usine de dessalement pourra traiter 100 millions de litres d'eau par jour pour les 800 000 habitants de cette région aride, frontalière du Pakistan.
https://www.connaissancedesenergies.org ... -gw-201215

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Re: Politique énergétique en Inde

Message par energy_isere » 18 déc. 2020, 22:01

Mise en production du plus profond gisement de gaz offshore d'Asie.
Reliance pour 2/3 plus BP pour le 1/3 restant.
12.9 millions de m3 par jour.
Deepest Offshore Asia Gas Field Comes Online

by Andreas Exarheas|Rigzone StaffFriday, December 18, 2020

BP and Reliance Industries Limited (NSE: Reliance) announced Friday the start of production from the R Cluster ultra deepwater gas field, which is located in block KG D6 off the east coast of India.

Situated at a water depth of greater than 2,000 meters, R Cluster is the deepest offshore gas field in Asia. The field is expected to reach plateau gas production of about 12.9 million standard cubic meters per day in 2021.

BP and RIL are developing three deepwater gas projects in block KG D6 – R Cluster, Satellites Cluster and MJ – which together are expected to meet around 15 percent of India’s gas demand by 2023. The projects will utilize the existing hub infrastructure in the KG D6 block.

“This start-up is another example of the possibility of our partnership with Reliance, bringing the best of both companies to help meet India’s rapidly expanding energy needs,” BP Chief Executive Bernard Looney said in a company statement.

“Growing India’s own production of cleaner-burning gas to meet a significant portion of its energy demand, these three new KG D6 projects will support the country’s drive to shape and improve its future energy mix,” he added.

Mukesh Ambani, the chairman and managing director of RIL, said, “we are proud of our partnership with BP that combines our expertise in commissioning gas projects expeditiously, under some of the most challenging geographical and weather conditions”.

“This is a significant milestone in India's energy landscape, for a cleaner and greener gas-based economy. Through our deep-water infrastructure in the Krishna Godavari basin we expect to produce gas and meet the growing clean energy requirements of the nation,” Ambani added.

RIL is the operator of KG D6 with a 66.67 percent participating interest. BP holds the remaining 33.33 percent participating interest.
https://www.rigzone.com/news/deepest_of ... 3-article/

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