JammuThe state government is planning to add more than 5,000 megawatts of power using the flow of its rivers within the next five to six years, according to Nirmal Kumar Singh, the states deputy chief minister and minister for the power-development department.
India, according to an Economic Times news report, is planning to as much as quintuple development of hydroelectric power in Jammu and Kashmir, a state that faces water disputes.
While neighbouring Pakistan has expressed concerns about potential water shortages that might result, Singh said he doesnt expect the hydro plans to create friction between the two nuclear-armed powers.
There were a lot of bottlenecks which we have cleared now, ET quotes Singh as having said. I dont see a reason for dispute with Pakistan on these projects.
Pakistan has already raised objections to some of the plans, citing water treaties between the two countries. It has plans to build more than 12 hydro-power dams of its own in the part of the Kashmir region that it controls, the report said.
Jammu and Kashmir had a 20 per cent shortage in electricity supplies in the seven months ended Oct. 31, compared with a national average of 0.7 per cent, according to data from the power ministry.
The shortages could be eased by hydro projects, which have the potential to generate as much as 20,000 megawatts and can be set up on rivers running through the regions mountainous terrain, Singh said.
An additional 7,000 megawatts could be generated through solar projects in the desert of the Ladakh region, he said.
The states government has put several hydro projects on a fast track after some had been stalled for years, according to Singh. Jammu and Kashmir already generates about 1,200 megawatts of hydro power, he said.
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