India’s Oil Secretary Pankaj Jain highlighted that despite robust infrastructure, power generation from natural gas faces challenges due to higher costs borne by consumers. This cost factor limits the potential of cleaner, gas-based energy in the power sector, underscoring the need for policy and pricing interventions to enhance adoption.
Natural Gas Power Generation Faces Cost Hurdles, Says Oil Secretary Pankaj Jain
India’s Secretary of the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, Shri Pankaj Jain, recently pointed out the challenges faced by power generation using natural gas. Although the infrastructure for natural gas-based power plants is in place across the country, the high cost passed on to end consumers is a significant barrier to wider usage.
Speaking at the Energy Leadership Forum (EL Forum), Jain emphasized that while India has made commendable progress in expanding natural gas infrastructure—including LNG import terminals and pipeline networks—the economic feasibility for power producers and consumers remains a persistent issue.
Despite the government's push towards cleaner energy, natural gas power generation has not scaled as expected, primarily due to cost competitiveness against other power sources such as coal and renewables. Jain underlined the need for market mechanisms, better pricing policies, and subsidies to make gas power more attractive and affordable.
Important Points
Infrastructure Ready: India has a well-developed natural gas infrastructure with multiple LNG terminals and an expanding pipeline network reaching several states.
High Consumer Cost: The prohibitive cost of natural gas for power producers translates to expensive electricity for consumers, limiting demand.
Policy Needs: There is a pressing need to address pricing and subsidy structures to make natural gas a viable energy source for power generation.
Clean Energy Role: Natural gas remains critical to India’s energy transition as a cleaner alternative and ‘bridge fuel’ towards renewables.
Investment and Growth: Continued investments in gas infrastructure and diversification of supply sources remain government priorities.
Major Takeaways
India’s energy transition faces a financial challenge in making natural gas power generation affordable despite ready infrastructure.
Strategic policy reforms, including incentivization and market reforms, are essential to unlock gas power’s potential.
Strengthening cost-efficiency could accelerate India’s shift away from coal, balancing energy security, environmental goals, and consumer affordability.
This nuanced understanding of natural gas’s role and associated challenges provides critical insights for stakeholders aiming to align India’s energy future with sustainability and economic realities.
Sources: Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MoPNG), EL Forum, Press Information Bureau (PIB)