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Captive power plants to remain in business

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– MS Unnikrishnan, Managing Director and CEO, Thermax Limited

Thermal sector has been facing challenges owing to many factors, the announcement of phasing out of thermal capacity addition added fuel to the fire. What is the effect on a company like Thermax who caters to captive power segment?
First and foremost, all sectors are not heading to negative. Phasing out of thermal will take significant time. India doesn’t have gas available; no oil available, the only fuel available in the country is coal. There is a lot of industry segment, which is dependent on captive power, e.g. cement plant. It would require firm power. If there is infirmity of power, it will lead to a shutdown affecting the production. Such disruption significantly affects the annual output of the company, which is a very dangerous thing to happen. So cement plants will continue to have captive power plants. Infact, cement is an industry, even though there is an economic slowdown, companies in this segment is investing in cement manufacturing units and captive power plants.

Secondly, cements plants have waste heat available. Depending on the capacity to invest, almost up to 50 per cent of the total power requirement can be met from the energy produced from this route. It varies from 30 to 50 per cent from plant to plant. If you go for 30 per cent energy from waste recovery, then your payback would be five years; whereas if you go for up to 50 per cent, then your payback would be seven to eight years. If the company has got a policy, the treasury can invest only in safe instruments; in that case, the payback of 10 years is absolutely good. As coal is used in making cement, there is a renewable purchase obligation (RPO). Waste to energy would help meet the RPO compliances.

In the case of sponge iron industry, there is a lot of waste gas. If you don’t convert it into electricity, it reflects on the viability of the plant. Similarly, there are companies from food processing and chemical industry where steam is required for the processes. Here one can look at a cogeneration plant, where both electricity and steam (heat) could be produced from the same plant; thus, the viability increases for the company.

So these niche segments are going to be continuing to have captive and cogeneration power plants. The investment climate in India is not good currently. It will capture back when the industrialisation catches back.

When do you see the current situation improving in terms of investment climate?
I am not a negativist in the current circumstances. It is a temporary affair; there is undoubtedly pressure on any investment right now. Consumption capture in the country is under negative sentiments. In my opinion, it will take another few quarters, and in some case, it may take six quarters, and some sectors may turnaround in two to three quarters time. A combination of money in hand and the sentiments improving will result in consumption going up. Once that happens, the FMCG improves, then durables and ultimately, the automobile also will pick up. This is because India got a population growth happening.

As these start reflecting, the power demand also will start climbing. The Indian urban population is steadily growing, and they use energy guzzlers like the air conditioners.

In recent years the quality of power from the grid has gone up. Do you think this is going to toughen the competition for companies like yours?
There is even now, an arbitrage of generating your own power apart from the security of power. One can generate electricity based on the current coal prices prevailing in India or on imported coal. The cost of the generated electricity will be between Rs 4.50 to 4.75, including the defraying of investments. Who will supply power at this to an industry consumer? I am also an industry consumer with 11 factories running. Nobody supplies electricity at that rate. For a factory that consumes 20/30/40 MW, captive generation is much economical than grid power. To remain competitive, if energy is a major cost factor in running the factory, then certainly one would look at economical options to bring down the production expenses.

Will captive have a robust market going forward?
Remember, the population of India and that of China are almost the same. China produces four times of electricity than India. Even if you have to develop up to China level, India needs to generate four times the current levels. Do you think India has the money to generate that much electricity? So, the industry has to fend for them for development to be happening.

Captive power industry/cogeneration industry in India will continue to remain in existence. But the relevance may come down 20 or 25 years down the lines. We are not there yet. In a fully developed infrastructure like that of the developed world, when India reaches that level, captive power will suffer.

Where does India stand in terms of grid power for industries?
When India would have a reliable grid like the one in the lines of the Euro Grid, where they give two feeders. Even if one feeder fails, the other feeder will automatically start operating. India has developed, in my reckoning, 15 to 20 per cent now. About 80 per cent development is still to happen. This would take at least three to four decades minimum.

– LIZA V

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Concrete

CCU testbeds in Tamil Nadu

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Tamil Nadu is set to host one of India’s five national carbon capture and utilisation (CCU) testbeds, aimed at reducing CO2 emissions in the cement industry as part of the country’s 2070 net-zero goal, as per a news report. The facility will be based at UltraTech Cement’s Reddipalayam plant in Ariyalur, supported by IIT Madras and BITS Pilani. Backed by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), the project will pilot an oxygen-enriched kiln capable of capturing up to two tonnes of CO2 per day for conversion into concrete products. Additional testbeds are planned in Rajasthan, Odisha, and Andhra Pradesh, involving companies like JK Cement and Dalmia Cement. Union Minister Jitendra Singh confirmed that funding approvals are underway, with full implementation expected in 2025.

Image source:https://www.heavyequipmentguide.ca/

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Concrete

JSW Cement gears up for IPO

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JSW Cement has set the price range for its upcoming initial public offering(IPO) at US$1.58 to US$1.67 per share, aiming to raise approximately US$409 million. As reported in the news, around US$91 million from the proceeds will be directed towards partially financing a new integrated cement plant in Nagaur, Rajasthan. Additionally, the company plans to utilise US$59.2 million to repay or prepay existing debts. The remaining capital will be allocated for general corporate purposes.

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Concrete

Cement industry to gain from new infrastructure spending

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As per a news report, Karan Adani, ACC Chair, has said that he expects the cement industry to benefit from the an anticipated US$2.2tn in new public infrastructure spending between 2025 and 2030. In a statement he said that ACC has crossed the 100Mt/yr cement capacity milestone in April 2025, propelling the company to get closer to its ambitious 140Mt/yr target by the 2028 financial year. The company’s capacity corresponds to 15 per cent of an all-India installed capacity of 686Mt/yr.

Image source:https://cementplantsupplier.com/cement-manufacturing/emerging-trends-in-cement-manufacturing-technology/

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