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Back to basics in power sector reform
A LOT of ``whole truths and home truths'' about the embattled
power sector in the country surfaced and were placed under the
spotlight at the fourth Energy Summit organised by the
Confederation of Indian Industry - Southern Region (CII - SR) in
Chennai recently.
Propositions such as `The beginning of the power sector reform
should have been the distribution-end' with a view to
transforming the State electricity boards (SEBs) ``from
bankruptcy to bankability'' or that fuel choices should be made
on the basis of long-term viability and national energy security,
indigenous resources and costs and not short-term considerations
of bridging the energy gap and offers from foreign players, are
indeed too obvious to need reiteration.
But in the present context where issues are often confused - both
deliberately and out of ignorance - by various interests, and the
battle over the energy sector is coming to a head both inside and
outside Parliament, the focus on basics at the Summit was quite
timely. So were the in-depth discussions by professionals and
businesses in respect of coal and petroleum fuels.Equally
importantly, the Summit devoted enough attention to renewable
energy and environment which, arguably, will offer the most
viable and integrated solution to the issues of poverty,
environment, equity and decentralised development, besides
national energy security, in the not-so-long term.
Any proactive approach to energy should take into account the
promises and problems that the renewables - hydro-electric,
particularly mini hydel, solar, wind and biomass - sector poses,
the technological, managerial-institutional progress being made
in these sectors in various parts of the world including India,
and the hidden environmental costs of conventional fossil fuels
that will be increasingly exposed by activism at the national and
international levels. Presentations on operating projects in the
renewables sector and their economies and financing schemes at
the national and global levels were eye-openers.
Ministerial and official spokesmen from the Central government
emphasised that the target of doubling power generation to two
lakh MW in the next decade was not only not based on an
exaggeration of demand but was also a prerequisite for an average
GDP growth of at least eight per cent to nine per cent.
Capacities of such magnitudes (one lakh MW in a decade compared
to one lakh MW in the past five decades) cannot be achieved
without private investment taking care of at least 50 per cent of
new capacity.
Contrast this with the stance of some inveterate optimists (that
is how one has to describe them, considering their assumptions
about ease of structural reform) who expressed the fear that once
electricity boards are restored to health (something that, by all
accounts, will take a minimum of five years), captive power
capacity will become a costly proposition compared to grid power
and hence investment in captive capacity, be it for individual
industries or groups of consumers, should be undertaken with
great caution.
Some participants from the floor asked, ``Why not improve the
public sector, instead of inviting private and foreign
capital?'', while some others pointed to improvements effected in
recent times in material management and customer service in Tamil
Nadu. The moot question, however, is whether SEBs discovering
their potential for improvement could at all be delinked from the
question of competition coming up on the horizon.
Political and official spokesmen from Tamil Nadu were eloquently
silent on what the government intended to do about the SEB
restructuring proposals before it by way of the report of
international consultants - a silence that is to be seen in the
context of the coming election to the State legislature and the
tendency at the State level of avoiding an open and transparent
debate on policies, options and issues. The fact that the State
has not appointed a Chairman to the Regulatory Commission two
years after accepting the policy of having ERCs was not even
mentioned by experts at the meeting - again the manifestation of
a tendency to avoid debate and open criticism of powers-that-be.
An indication of how strongly the SEB system will resist reform
is given by its consistent refusal, in most States - including
Tamil Nadu - to allow sale of power to third parties even by the
private producers in the renewable energy sector, despite the
fact that renewables (excluding mega hydel into which private
capital is unlikely to enter) form a minuscule part of total
capacity (1,756 MW out of one lakh MW or 1.76 per cent, most of
the former being in the wind sector).
Electricity Bill 2000
Fear of ``cherry picking'' by the private sector (otherwise known
as privatising profitable markets and nationalising loss-inducing
markets), when extended to renewables, is surely unwarranted. It
only betrays a total lack of self-confidence on the part of the
SEBs induced by their present weak balance-sheets and not based
on their genuine potential as mega players once reforms make
adequate progress.
Officials and experts pointed out some salient features of the
Electricity Bill 2000 (which have been distorted by opponents of
reform). The Bill (yet to take a final shape) only abolishes the
mandatory requirement of having an SEB but does not compel States
which want to continue with the SEB system in their present
structure to do so. It says State governments may direct the
State Electricity Reforms Commissions to provide for subsidy in
the tariff payable, on condition that the government bears the
subsidy in the manner specified and there is financial
appropriation by the State legislature.
It mandates 100 per cent metering in three years. (Which genuine
spokesman of State autonomy could oppose a provision like this
which would prevent fleecing of a State undertaking by
unscrupulous consumers, especially the rich?) The State
Commission cannot decide tariff where it is decided by the Union
government. The Bill also seeks to encourage a trading mechanism
to create a market in electricity.
Despite the surface unity among opponents of power sector reform
across the country, it is clear that resistance to reform is
directly proportional to the level of economic development of a
State. States such as Tamil Nadu which have built a well-
developed infrastructure and institutional system in the early
decades of planning, whose system deterioration is mainly a
result of the inherent evils of monopoly and political populism
and where the EB system has developed a strong constituency with
a vested interest in it, are more resistant to reform.
Resistance will be less in States that have remained relatively
backward and where, by the time the reforms came, Central
planning and devolution of funds from the Centre, compared to the
requirement, had weakened substantially. As several experts
pointed out, the testing times for reform will be in the initial
years when tariffs go up (in fact they have substantially gone up
in reforming States like Andhra Pradesh and Orissa in the post-
reform period), before going down (in terms of constant prices)
after competition and streamlined systems settle in and capital
costs are recovered.
The tendency on the part of anti-reform lobbies to compare the
production cost of new plants in the private sector with the
overall production cost of SEBs is irrational but is rarely
countered. Even at the Energy Summit, nothing was said to counter
this (or for that matter many misleading points raised by
opponents of reforms, particularly trade unions). New capacities
to be put up by SEBs (assuming they have enough surpluses to
invest in new capacities to meet ever rising demand from the
industrial, agricultural and domestic sectors) are unlikely to be
vastly different assuming the fuels are the same.
What is more, opponents of any change in power sector management
even compare the cost of subsidised power from SEBs to the price
charged by IPPs to purchasing SEBs. Not only the cost of power
subsidy to the exchequer is left out of such reckoning, but more
deplorably, the argument is blind to the fact that ``subsidies''
are often either targeted at the non-poor, or are simply passed
back to the economy through high budget deficits, inflation and
low economic growth and employment, which affect the poorest the
most, making them pay the cost of the ``subsidies''. Also,
confusion is created by comparing the 16 per cent return on
`equity' guaranteed to private investors to initially attract
them and get some ``success stories'' with three per cent minimum
return on ``net fixed assets'' for SEBs prescribed under law.
After dabbling with payment ``security mechanisms'' such as
escrow accounts and securitisation to guarantee private promoters
in generation, the community of power generators and consumers as
also policy-makers - and also multilateral institutions and
India's leading trade partners - are coming to rely on financial
incentives and assistance to encourage States and SEBs to
undertake restructuring. This also seems to be a case of topsy-
turvy priorities. Such an approach should have been adopted at
the beginning of the reform process. Now, the Power Finance
Corporation, Indian financial institutions, World Bank, Asian
Development Bank and other agencies are operating special
financial windows to facilitate restructuring and reform of the
power sector.
Also, as was pointed out at the Summit, there is by and large a
political consensus for SEBs reform, though not in favour of any
single model for all States, despite the shrill protests
emanating from the compulsions of competitive politics. This is a
good sign of democratic assimilation of issues and tasks. For
instance, it was pointed out, West Bengal has decided to
segregate the rural electrification sector needing State funding
support, while turning the other wings of the power sector into
profit centres without privatising or corporatising them.
Similarly, Kerala has gone in for a slightly different model with
international cooperation.
But believe it or not, the most encouraging sign has come from a
very important section of ``stakeholders'' in the power sector -
labour - if only one cares to see it. ``SEBs have been driven to
bankruptcy by populist policies of governments''. This is a
pronouncement from the memorandum submitted to the Prime Minister
on August 9, by the National Coordination Committee of
Electricity Employees and Engineers, which is now embarked on an
agitation programme against the Electricity Bill 2000, especially
its provision for removing the monopoly control of SEBs over the
power sector.
Even while expressing fears (reflecting Left perceptions) that
power sector reform was being used to ``sell national assets''
cheaply to private and foreign capital, the memorandum calls for
``enforcing corrective measures and fiscal discipline'' among
SEBs, implementation of the mandate to earn minimum three per
cent return on fixed assets, compulsory enforcement of metering
and compensating SEBs fully for free or concessional power
supplied at the behest of the State governments.
Thus it is clear that power sector reform can make progress in a
stable manner only if the legitimate concerns of the labour force
as a leading ``stakeholder'' (including the unstated issues about
job losses) are addressed. How this is handled will depend on the
predilections of policy-makers, at both the political and
administrative levels.
In the political spectrum, at one end is the strategy of pushing
ahead with power sector reforms (or for that matter any aspect of
economic reform) by whipping up ultra-nationalism and communal
chauvinism as a means to legitimise authoritarian social and
political management. At the other end are those who, while
mouthing anti-imperialist rhetoric, would resist any reform, not
knowing that this would only land the power economy in a
situation where the only players ``willing and able'' to take the
plunge will be international finance capital!
How industry and business react in this scenario and whether they
will take proactive steps on their own in a farsighted manner are
multi-million-dollar questions.
R. Gopalakrishnan
in Chennai
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