What they're not telling you: # India's Coal Consumption Surges Past Climate Commitments as Grid Planning Fails India's power ministry is quietly burning coal at record rates while publicly championing renewable energy targets it knows it cannot meet without massive infrastructure investment it refuses to make. On a single day last week, India's thermal power plants—predominantly coal-fired—supplied 62 percent of the nation's electricity as peak demand hit 271 gigawatts, according to statements from India's power ministry reported by AFP. This is not an outlier.

What the Documents Show

Coal now accounts for approximately 60 percent of India's total power output, a figure that has remained stubbornly stable even as the country's Central Electricity Authority published its new Generation Adequacy Plan earlier this year, which projects nearly quadrupling solar capacity and tripling wind assets within a decade. The contradiction embedded in these simultaneous facts reveals a structural failure in India's energy planning. The power ministry's own data shows that while solar covered only 22 percent of demand during peak hours this week, and wind and hydro each provided just 5 percent, coal's dominance persists because grid infrastructure—transmission lines, substations, storage capacity—has fundamentally failed to keep pace with renewable installations. In the first quarter of this fiscal year alone, grid operators were forced to curtail 300 gigawatts of renewable energy that the system could not absorb. That is waste on an industrial scale, masked by obscure technical jargon.

🔎 Mainstream angle
The corporate press either ignored this story entirely or buried it in a 3-sentence brief. The framing, when it appeared at all, focused on process rather than impact.

Follow the Money

The real story lies in what gets left out of the ministry's cheerful press releases. India's coal demand from power plants is projected to rise 11.5 percent during the peak summer quarter, according to sources the Economic Times contacted in April. This is not a temporary spike caused by unusual heat. This is baseline planning. While the ministry celebrates the new generation adequacy targets, coal capacity installations continue rising, and India's reliance on coal for baseload power remains the decisive factor in every grid decision made by the Central Electricity Authority's operations team. Heat waves are the convenient explanation offered to justify coal consumption, and technically true.

What Else We Know

But they obscure who is responsible for India not having adequate transmission infrastructure to deploy the renewable capacity it has already built. The ministry did not fail to anticipate peak summer demand—that is predictable seasonal pattern. The ministry failed to upgrade the grid in time. It failed to fund transmission at the rate renewable installations proceeded. It failed to plan storage solutions that would have reduced curtailment. These are not acts of God.

Jordan Calloway
The Jordan Calloway Take
Government Secrets & FOIA

What I find striking is how completely the official narrative inverts reality while remaining technically true. India genuinely is expanding solar and wind capacity. The Central Electricity Authority genuinely published ambitious targets. But these facts function as cover for the continued expansion of coal infrastructure while political accountability for infrastructure failures remains diffused across bureaucratic entities no journalist can name or voters can hold accountable.

The pattern here is standard: make the long-term commitment rhetorically, miss the short-term infrastructure targets quietly, and blame external factors—heat waves, demand growth, transmission challenges—that sound technical and inevitable rather than like choices made by specific people who allocated resources differently. The Ministry of Power benefits from being perceived as climate-conscious without bearing the cost of actually building the grid required to prove it.

Watch the Central Electricity Authority's next quarterly curtailment report. If renewable energy continues being wasted at scale while coal consumption rises, you are watching a system designed to fail—not accidentally, but by allocation. Demand to know which officials approved coal plant construction over transmission upgrades. That choice exists in a file somewhere.

Primary Sources

What are they not saying?
Who benefits from this story staying buried? Follow the regulatory filings, the court dockets, and the FOIA releases. The truth is in the paperwork — it always is.

Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.