Back To Forward / Inder Malhotra: Rising Oil Prices and Indian Energy Crunch
Back To Forward / Inder Malhotra: Rising Oil Prices and Indian Energy Crunch
Back To Forward / Inder Malhotra: Rising Oil Prices and Indian Energy Crunch
One foolish act in West Asia - what with the unending war in Iraq, the
even more endless conflict in Palestine, the Israeli air force's
provocative exercise for an attack of Iran's nuclear facilities, and the
horrifying mess in Afghanistan climaxing in the ghastly attack on the
Indian embassy - can spin the situation out of control, and convert the
nightmare of $ 200 a barrel into reality.
It is against this grim global backdrop that this country has to manage
its agonising energy crunch. The task is stupendous. The
commendable goal of first maintaining the nine per cent rate of
growth and then raising it to a double-digit figure would require
anything between 10 and 15 per cent annual increase in energy
supply. The question is how to produce it, and at what cost?
Ever since the signing of the July 18, 2005 agreement with President
George W. Bush on the civilian nuclear cooperation, the Prime
Minister has been emphasising that the primary aim of the deal is to
safeguard India's energy security. His critics dispute this and assert
that the whole exercise is for strategic partnership with the US.
However, in any case, most of world is reverting to nuclear power as
a clean source of energy, and the Indo-US deal does promise this
country nuclear fuel, technology and equipment. But, even if the deal
goes through, it would take at least a decade for new nuclear power
reactors to start functioning. The same will be the case with the Iran-
Pakistan-India gas pipeline that, despite apprehensions about its
safety during its transit in Pakistan, has many merits, and should,
therefore, be expedited. Yet in both cases there would be the problem
of costs. Both nuclear power and Iranian gas would be costlier than
the energy available from coal-based power stations though these
produce carbon dioxide and aggravate the problem of climate
change. Coal is indeed the cheapest as also the largest source of
electricity generation in this country. In the foreseeable future its
share would increase from two-thirds to 70 per cent. Hydro-power
can be cleaner and useful but its future supply would depend largely
on cooperation with Nepal and Bhutan. The latter is very helpful; the
former, alas, is not.
As for renewable sources, the irony is exquisite. Just one per cent of
this country's land area can generate practically half the electricity it
needs. But apart from institutional shortcomings, the high cost of
solar power is a big roadblock. In developed countries they are
talking of a tax on coal to cover the expenditure on obligations under
the Kyoto Protocol to make alternative sources more attractive. Here
that would be unacceptable.