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Enron: Chronicle of a millstone foretold
When the global history of foreign investment projects that went
terribly wrong is drawn up, the Enron power project will be high
up in the list. When case studies of how not to involve the
private sector in the infrastructure sector are prepared, Enron
or the Dabhol Power Company (DPC) will once again be taught in
class rooms.
Less than two years after it started producing power, everything
that everybody from the Centre for Indian Trade Unions to the
Swadeshi Jagran Manch and innumerable independent (and honest)
energy analysts had predicted in the early/mid-1990s has come
true - and earlier than expected. Phase I (740 MW) of DPC is
producing expensive power and is placing a heavy burden on the
already financially troubled Maharashtra State Electricity Board
(MSEB).
To save MSEB from DPC power will require giving further
concessions to the Enron firm, which only means making a bigger
millstone of the project around the necks of the Maharashtra
Government, the Union Government and the Indian economy.
The immediate issue for the State Government is whether or not it
should cancel the second phase (1,744 MW) of the project. Various
figures are being put out about the compensation MSEB has to pay
Enron if the second phase were to be cancelled - the most
commonly mentioned figure is in the region of around Rs. 30,000
crores. However, no official has been able to make clear how this
figure has been arrived at.
The first thing that the State Government can do now is to at
least this time conduct an independent and impartial inquiry into
what cancellation will cost. (Unfortunately, the Enron project
has been subject to other inquiries in the past which have been
the cause of the present problem.
Most infamous was the renegotiating committee of 1995 which in
order to show that it had succeeded in bringing about a reduction
in capital costs - when actually there was no reduction - it
combined the two phases. In its first avatar, the second and
larger phase was only an option for the MSEB. The 1995 committee
made Phase II a contractual burden.)
A tendentious argument that is making the rounds is that if only
MSEB was in a sound financial position it would have been able to
pick up DPC power at a 90 per cent plant load factor, which would
have resulted in the cost of DPC power at around Rs. 5.40 a unit
as against Rs. 7.09 that it actually cost in October. (Both are
more than double the under Rs. 2.50 a unit that was projected in
the mid-1990s).
It is true that in a two-part tariff comprising a capacity charge
and energy charge, a lower PLF increases the former and therefore
raises the cost of power.
However, the situation here is that the Maharashtra Electricity
Regulatory Commission has correctly placed DPC power low in the
priority - because the dollar-denominated tariff and imported-
fuel based power of DPC makes this far more expensive than any of
the power produced by MSEB's other plants. Even if the MSEB was
in the pink of financial health, the high cost of DPC power would
have dragged the utility down quickly.
The real reason for the true picture of Enron power coming to
light so quickly is simple and was forewarned ad nauseum at the
height of the controversy. First, a dollar-denominated tariff is
a recipe for expensive power as the rupee is bound to depreciate
against the dollar. Second, the dependence on imported fuel,
especially petroleum-related, as Enron is (naphtha now and LNG on
completion of Phase II), opens the door for the cost of power to
go through the roof when the global situation takes a turn for
the worse.
This is precisely what has happened in recent months, when the
rupee has steadily fallen and global naphtha prices have sharply
risen. It is claimed that once a switch to LNG is made the cost
of DPC power will decline. Maybe LNG will make a difference and
may be OPEC will have a change of heart. But there is another
danger lurking round the corner: According to the agreement,
there is a back-loading of the tariff. That is , the capital
costs of the project will be recovered more in the future than
now, another route to more expensive power.
In the many lessons that must be leant from the Enron project,
the first three are very simple: never go in for a power plant
run on imported petroleum fuel, never agree to a dollar-
denominated tariff and never back-load the tariff. Unfortunately,
a number of private projects on the drawing board and at
different stages of clearance contain one or more of these
features. There are more Enrons in the making.
The options that are now being advocated to save Phase II include
lowering customs tariffs for equipment to be imported and
reducing the cost of domestic loans.
Another is to change the terms of the contract so that DPC power
can be fed into the entire western power grid - by submerging
expensive DPC in the larger system the true cost of DPC power
will be hidden in the larger average. The one gives DPC more
concessions and the other is just a subterfuge.
The sordid saga of the clearance, cancellation and renegotiation
of the Enron project has shown few of the participating political
actors ranging from the Congress(I) to the Shiv Sena and BJP and
also the officials and academics in either the State or at the
Centre in a positive light.
The question now, in the next phase of this murky drama, is if
any of the current crop of actors will show greater integrity of
purpose than their colleagues and mentors did in the past. There
is one message that they should learn.
During the earlier controversy, ``What will happen to foreign
investment?'' was a bogey sounded to pressure the decision-makers
to retract cancellation. We now know the benefits that this
particular foreign investment project - totalling over a billion
dollars and in its time the single largest case of FDI in the
country - has brought to the economy.
Pakistan is not always the best example for our policymakers. But
it cancelled the supply of power from the billion dollar HUBCO
foreign power project three years ago, in spite of protests from
the international financial community. It has just completed re-
negotiations which will lead to a lowering of tariff and result
in a saving of $3 billion, according to the Government of
Pakistan.
CRR
(An analysis - ``Enron deal: Mid-course options before the MSEB''
- is published on Page BS I of the Business Review today.)
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