DocumentCode :
1028515
Title :
Electric power: a government priority
Author :
Ramamoorty, M.
Author_Institution :
Central Power Res. Inst., Bangalore, India
Volume :
31
Issue :
3
fYear :
1994
fDate :
3/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
51
Lastpage :
52
Abstract :
Keenly aware of the serious obstruction to future development, the Government of India has made generating capacity and transmission system additions a priority in its five year economic plans. The current plan, for the period 1992-97, originally envisioned an addition of 38,000 MW, or about 50 percent of India´s installed capacity. This would raise peak power availability to just over 65,000 MW to meet anticipated peak demand of nearly 70,000 MW. Expected energy availability would be 472.7 terawatthours, for a requirement of 395.3 TWh. The plan also called for transmission-circuit additions of 4000 km of 400 kV line, 1200 km of 800 kV line, and 1500 km of high-voltage DC (HVDC) line. Regrettably, all of these figures have proved too ambitious in light of significant financial constraints. Consequently, in 1997, at the end of the planning period, the country would fall short by about 15 percent in meeting both energy and peak-demand requirements.<>
Keywords :
electric power generation; government policies; power system planning; power transmission lines; transmission networks; 1200 km; 1500 km; 38000 MW; 395300000 MWh; 400 kV; 4000 km; 472700000 MWh; 65000 MW; 70000 MW; 800 kV; HVDC line; India; development; five year economic plan; generating capacity; government; peak demand; peak power availability; planning; power transmission lines; transmission circuits; transmission system; Availability; Government; Laboratories; Meeting planning; Power generation; Power supplies; Power system reliability; Standards development; System testing; Thyristors;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9235
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/6.265409
Filename :
265409
Link To Document :
بازگشت