Coal-Based Power Plants Are Worsening Air Pollution In Delhi-NCR

According to a new analysis, non-compliance of thermal power plants in Delhi-NCR with emissions standards is contributing significantly to air pollution in the region.

The study by Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), the environmental think tank, focuses on particulate matter, nitrogen oxide and sulphur dioxide emissions from the 11 thermal power plants (TPPs) located in Delhi-NCR and is based on their environmental status reports, which have been sourced from the website of the Central Electricity Authority (CEA), which is a technical arm of the Union Ministry of Power, from April 2022 to August 2023.

According to Anumita Roychowdhury, Executive Director, Research and Advocacy, CSE, “Delhi-NCR cannot achieve the clean air benchmark and safeguard public health if continuous sources of pollution, such as thermal power plants, continue to emit pollutants at high levels. These plants have struggled to meet the standards, primarily due to continually shifting compliance deadlines.” Studies show that the TPPs account for around eight percent of the PM2.5 pollution in Delhi-NCR.

Despite multiple deadline extensions and revised categorisations by the Union Environment Ministry, many plants in the region are struggling to meet prescribed norms for emissions of nitrogen oxide, sulphur dioxide and particulate matter, the CSE report says.

In December 2015, the ministry established stringent emission standards for coal-based power plants, requiring compliance within two years. It later granted a five-year extension to all power plants, except those in Delhi-NCR, which were given a deadline until 2019 to comply due to the region’s high pollution levels.

However, despite this, all NCR plants — except for Dadri TPP and Mahatma Gandhi TPP, failed to meet the revised deadline and continued operating in violation until another extension in March 2021.

Thereafter, the ministry then categorised all power plants, including those in Delhi-NCR, into three groups (A, B, and C) based on criteria set by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB).

Accordingly, new deadlines were set. Category A plants must meet SO2 emission norms by December 31, 2024. Category B plants have until December 31, 2025, to meet the SO2 emission norms and Category C plants are required to comply with SO2 emission norms by December 31, 2026.

The remaining seven plants — except for Dadri, Indira Gandhi, Mahatma Gandhi, and Panipat TPPs — were classified under Category C, granting them additional time for compliance.

Three plants in the NCR — Harduaganj TPP, Panipat TPP, and Guru Hargobind TPP — are still reporting very high suspended particulate matter emissions, almost six years after the first deadline, according to the CSE report.

Four plants — Panipat TPP, Rajiv Gandhi TPP and Yamunanagar TPP in Haryana and Guru Hargobind TPP in Punjab — have exceeded the NOx norms several times during the reporting period. This was despite the government r4elaxing nitrogen oxide norms and deadlines.

Meanwhile, all coal power plants in NCR have reported SO2 emissions up to three times over the prescribed limits.

Dadri TPP, equipped with sulphur dioxide control equipment (FGD), reported high SO2 readings 86 percent of the time during the reporting period. Mahatma Gandhi TPP remains within the limit for sulphur dioxide emissions,

Researchers suggest that either the coal used has very high sulphur content or the FGDs at Dadri TPP are malfunctioning or have insufficient capacity.

Former director of the CPCB, DD Basu, says that controlling SO2 emissions is essential, as they convert to sulphates, posing greater risks to health and the environment by forming fine particulate matter.

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