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The world’s largest coal mining firm is to “aggressively” pursue solar energy and continue to close smaller mines.
Coal India Limited (CIL) plans to invest in a 3,000 megawatt solar energy project in a joint venture with state-run NLC India.
The company also wants to compete in India’s solar auctions and win projects by offering the lowest prices for clean power.
It marks a major shift for the firm, which produces most of India’s coal.
“Coal as you know, we’re going to lose business in the next two, three decades. Solar will take over (from) coal slowly as a major energy provider in the coming years,” CIL’s chairman Pramod Agarwal said in an interview with Reuters.
The company’s solar project with NLC India will be worth 125bn rupees ($1.73bn ; £1.26bn), with CIL expected to invest roughly half of that figure by 2024.
Mr Agarwal said he expected further reductions to the workforce, with the savings potentially reinvested into solar wafer production.
Energy transformation
India currently uses about one billion tons of coal annually, making it the world’s second largest consumer behind China.
CIL is by far the country’s biggest producer, with the company aiming to produce 710 million tons of coal in 2020-21, according to India’s coal ministry.
That’s slightly more than all US coal companies produced in 2019, according to figures from the US Energy Information Agency.
India is hoping for a significant shift in its energy mix over the coming years to help it meet its climate targets.
Although the lower emissions were partly due to strict Covid-19 lockdown measures, lower demand for coal was also a factor.
India hopes to generate 175GW of renewable energy capacity by next year, with a target of 450GW by the end of the decade.
Source: bbc.com