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The coal power plants under construction globally fell by 13% in 2021

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Coal Power Projects, India, Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), China, Net-Zero Emissions

After China, India has the most proposed coal power projects. In addition, the number of coal power plants under construction globally fell by 13% in 2021.According to the analysis, India’s pre-construction coal power capacity fell by approximately 90% between 2015 and 2021. It fell from roughly 238.6 gigawatts (GW) in 2015 to 36.6 GW in 202 and 12.7 GW in 2021.Research shows that despite signals of a coal phaseout in India, more than 23.8 GW of planned capacity exists, with more than half (12.6 GW or 52%) allowed, 31.3 GW under construction, and few with fixed retirement dates.The researchers also discovered that, after increasing for the first time since 2015 in 2020, total coal power capacity under development fell 13% last year, from 525 GW to 457 GW.New coal plants are being considered by 34 nations, down from 41 countries in January 2021. China, South Korea, and Japan all vowed not to fund new coal plants in other countries, but China continued to lead other nations in domestic coal plant construction, commissioning more coal capacity than the rest of the world combined.Since the Paris Agreement (to prevent global warming) was signed in 2015, coal plant capacity in pre-construction has decreased by 77%.The coal plant pipeline is dwindling, but there isn’t enough carbon budget to build new coal plants. Global Energy Monitor’s Flora Champenois said that we have to stop now. Many rising economies have scaled back plans for additional coal-fired capacity, with India, Vietnam, Bangladesh, and Egypt leading the way. New phase-out objectives and plant retirements have been declared by developed countries.Lauri Myllyvirta, chief analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), said that countries with net-zero emission objectives but no coal phase-out strategy in place must now move up.Sunil Dahiya, an analyst with CREA, said that India’s new aim of 500 GW of renewable energy by 2030 might enable the government to start phasing down coal far before 2030, even if power demand growth remains at pre-pandemic rates.It would be a highly significant move if a strong no-new-coal plan for the power industry is developed and executed, as it would codify energy and economic growth plans in line with India’s clean energy integration roadmap as agreed at COP26.

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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.

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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.

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