New Delhi: The country's fossil fuel-based power generation capacity increased 2.44 percent to 243.22 GW in FY'24 from 237.27 GW in March 2023, according to official figures.
There was a 10.79 percent rise in non-fossil fuel-based capacity (renewable energy sources) addition at 190.57 Gigawatt (GW) in 2023-24 over 172.01 GW in 2022-23, the government data showed.
While the fossil fuel-based capacity includes power generation through coal, lignite, gas and diesel sources, the non-fossil fuel includes power generated from solar, wind and hydropower.
The nuclear power capacity addition rose to 8.18 GW from 6.78 GW in the last fiscal year, posting a year-on-year rise of 20.64 percent.
In FY'24, India's total power generation capacity rose 6.22 per cent to 441.97 GW over 416.06 GW, the data showed.
The coal-based capacity increased around 3 per cent to 210.97 GW from 205.24 GW in the last financial year, and gas capacity rose marginally to 25.04 GW from 24.82 GW in FY'23. The lignite- and diesel-based capacity were at 6.62 GW and 0.59 GW, respectively, in FY'24.
The renewable energy sources capacity increased to 143.64 GW, up 14.76 percent over 125.16 GW in FY23. Hydropower capacity also increased to 46.93 GW from 46.85 GW in the last fiscal year.
(PSU Watch– India's Business News centre that places the spotlight on PSUs, Bureaucracy, Defence and Public Policy is now on Google News. Click here to follow. Also, join PSU Watch Channel in your Telegram. You may also follow us on Twitter here and stay updated.)