Close Menu
USA Biz News Stay Current on Economy News
  • Home
  • USA
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • CEO
    • Realtor
    • Entrepreneur
    • Journalist
  • Sports
    • Athlete
    • Coach
    • Fitness trainer
  • Health
    • Doctor
    • Plastic Surgeon
    • Beauty Cosmetics
  • Economy
  • Life Style
Trending
  • Knowing More about Photochemical Etching and Dental Implants
  • Case study: How St. Luke’s Health System cut denials by 76% with Enhanced Claim Status
  • What the pandemic did to workouts
  • AC Milan sack coach Conceicao after six months in charge
  • The top five marathons and the top athletes in each: Tokyo, Boston, London, Berlin and New York
  • Milos Kerkez transfer news: Liverpool increasingly confident of signing Bournemouth left-back | Football News
  • Simple reason Aussies refusing to downsize for city
  • CEO pay rose nearly 10% in 2024 as stock prices and profits soared
USA Biz News Stay Current on Economy News
Thursday, June 5
  • Home
  • USA
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • CEO
    • Realtor
    • Entrepreneur
    • Journalist
  • Sports
    • Athlete
    • Coach
    • Fitness trainer
  • Health
    • Doctor
    • Plastic Surgeon
    • Beauty Cosmetics
  • Economy
  • Life Style
USA Biz News Stay Current on Economy News
Home » News » Coal-based power generation in FY25 records lowest growth since Covid: CREA

Coal-based power generation in FY25 records lowest growth since Covid: CREA

Jessica BrownBy Jessica Brown Business
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Coal -based energy generation registered its slower annual growth of 2.8 percent in fiscal year 2000 from COVID (FY21), even when the general electricity generation continued to increase, said a report from the Clean Energy and Air Research Center (CREA).

Although the maximum electricity demand remained almost unchanged in the last two years, the maximum demand with an increase of 240 gigawatts (GW) to 250 GW in fiscal year 2015. In particular, this greater demand was largely with renewable energy.

In fiscal year 2015, the thermal energy generation recorded the lowest year -on -year growth among all the main sources of electricity, increasing only 2.8 percent.

This marks a significant deceleration compared to the previous three years, where thermal power saw constant increases or 9.9 percent (Fy24), 8.2 percent (Fy23) and 7.96 percent (Fy22), said Crea.

In contrast, nuclear energy increased by 18.4 percent, while large hydroelectric and renewable energy grew by 10.8 percent and 11.4 percent, respectively. Therefore, except thermal, all other sources of generation witnessed a stronger growth compared to the previous year, he added.

Electricity generation

The generation of electricity from India in fiscal year 2015 touched a new maximum of 1,821 billion units (BU) that marks a continuation of the ascending trajectory since the fall of the pandemic. This represents a 5 % year -on -year growth over 1,734 BUs generated in the fiscal year24.

The growth rate has begun to moderate. The fiscal year24 registered a 7 percent increase compared to the previous year, and the year before that a strong increase of 9 percent.

In the fiscal year25, the generation of electricity of India increased in all sources annually. Thermal grew by 2.8 percent (1,326 BU to 1,363 BU), nuclear in 18.4 percent (48 Bu A 57 BU), large hydro by 10.8 percent (134 BU to 149 BU) and renewable energy by 11.4 percent (226 BU).

In fiscal year 2015, the maximum demand with increased to 250.1 GW, registering an increase of 4.2 percent compared to the previous year. Interestingly, this figure almost coincided with the total maximum demand, including unsatisfied demand or 250.2 GW, indicating that the gap between demand and supply is significantly narrowed, with only 0.1 GW (118 MW) or unattered demand.

Coal broth

At the beginning of the fiscal year26, the coal stock in the thermal power plants stood at 58.1 million tons (MT), reflecting a 15 percent increase over 50.5 MT recorded at the beginning of the FY25.

This continues a higher opening actions in recent years, compared to 36.9 TM in April 2023 and 25.4 MT in April 2022, suggestion of emphasis on the accumulation of preseason actions in the midst of a growing energy demand.

Posted on April 19, 2025

Previous ArticleClinton honors victims of deadly Oklahoma City bombing at 30th anniversary event
Next Article Kidnapped American pastor says ‘personal relationship with Jesus’ sustained him through ordeal

Keep Reading

I Scaled a 500-Person Company on Hustle — But Wellness Made It Sustainable (and More Profitable)

Disney Is Laying Off Hundreds of Workers Globally

Top Colleges Now Value What Founders Have Always Hired For

Grandma’s Recipe Started Business With $2B+ Annual Revenue

This Hidden Retail Tech Is Transforming Customer Experiences

7 AI Tools to Build a Profitable One-Person Business That Runs While You Sleep

Most View

I Scaled a 500-Person Company on Hustle — But Wellness Made It Sustainable (and More Profitable)

June 4, 2025

Disney Is Laying Off Hundreds of Workers Globally

June 3, 2025

Top Colleges Now Value What Founders Have Always Hired For

May 31, 2025
Latest Posts

I Scaled a 500-Person Company on Hustle — But Wellness Made It Sustainable (and More Profitable)

June 4, 2025

Disney Is Laying Off Hundreds of Workers Globally

June 3, 2025

Top Colleges Now Value What Founders Have Always Hired For

May 31, 2025

Grandma’s Recipe Started Business With $2B+ Annual Revenue

May 29, 2025

USA

  • World
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Life Style

Business

  • CEO
  • Realtor
  • Entrepreneur
  • journalist

Sports

  • Athlete
  • Coach
  • Fitness Trainer

Health

  • Doctor
  • Plastic Surgeon
  • Beauty Cosmetics
© 2017-2025 usabiznews. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.