
Thermal power additions in India continued at a slower pace during the current fiscal, with capacity growth lagging annual targets despite rising electricity demand.
Data from the Central Electricity Authority showed that India added 7.2 GW of thermal capacity in the first 9 months of the fiscal, compared with a full-year target of 12.86 GW. No new capacity was commissioned in December, underscoring the slowdown in thermal project execution over recent years.
In FY25, thermal capacity additions also remained below plan, with 4.53 GW commissioned against a target of 15.4 GW. For the current fiscal, experts estimate that additions may reach only 9.4 GW, well short of the planned levels.
Of the 18 thermal units targeted for commissioning, only 8 were completed by December 31. These included 6 units in the central sector and 2 units in the state sector.
The commissioned projects comprised North Karanpura STPP, Barh STPP St-I, Buxar TPP, Ghatampur TPP, Khurja SCTPP and Obra-C STPP at 660 MW each, along with Patratu STPP and Yadadri TPS at 800 MW each.
The private sector commissioned 4 power units with a combined capacity of 1.65 GW. As of January 20, 2026, a total of 39.5 GW of thermal capacity was under construction, including 4.8 GW classified as stressed assets.
Contracts have been awarded for 22.9 GW, while another 24 GW of coal and lignite-based capacity has been identified and is at various stages of planning.
India’s peak power demand reached 241 GW in 2025, compared with the CEA’s estimate of 270 GW. In 2024, peak demand stood at 250 GW in May against a projection of 260 GW.
As of December 2025, the country’s total installed power capacity was 513.7 GW, with thermal power accounting for 246.9 GW.
While India has committed to achieving 500 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030, policymakers have reiterated that renewables alone cannot meet rising demand, reinforcing continued reliance on coal-based generation.
Read More: India to Shield Steel Exports from EU Carbon Tax Impact!
With thermal additions falling short of targets and large capacity still under development, India’s power strategy continues to balance renewable expansion with sustained investment in coal and lignite-based generation to meet growing demand.
Disclaimer: This blog has been written exclusively for educational purposes. The securities mentioned are only examples and not recommendations. This does not constitute a personal recommendation/investment advice. It does not aim to influence any individual or entity to make investment decisions. Recipients should conduct their own research and assessments to form an independent opinion about investment decisions.
Investments in the securities market are subject to market risks, read all the related documents carefully before investing.
Published on: Feb 11, 2026, 10:47 AM IST

Team Angel One
We're Live on WhatsApp! Join our channel for market insights & updates
