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India's power ministry has said that it will not grant connectivity permissions to 6.3GW of clean energy projects after 2022.

The Indian federal transmission authority cancelled the transmission connectivity granted to developers for about 6.3 gigawatts in renewable energy capacity from 2022 onwards due to delays of projects, said the federal power ministry.

The Central Transmission Utility of India Ltd. (CTUIL), the ministry stated, revoked 24 project holders' access after they failed meet their commissioning deadlines.

Sixteen of these companies have challenged the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission's (CERC) decisions, seeking to protect their grid access approvals.

The federal regulator of power in the country received several requests from companies to process claims for losses due to lack of transmission infrastructure. In October, the regulator admitted two petitions from renewable energy developers who sought compensation for losses due to delays in establishing transmission infrastructure.

The Ministry of Power stated that the cancellations are not related to delays in transmission infrastructure. It also added that it does not reflect a lack of planning as India works towards its goal of installing non-fossil energy capacity of 500 gigawatts by 2030.

CTUIL and Power Grid Corporation of India, (PGRD.NS), are jointly responsible for the establishment of transmission infrastructure in India for renewable energy.

The power ministry reported that lines with a capacity of 172 GW renewable energy are currently being constructed. The ministry announced that bidding for 19 GW is currently underway.

The federal government said that it is working with the states to accelerate intra-state transmission upgrades required to support 152GW of renewable energy projects.

(source: Reuters)