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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, June 28, 2001 |
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Enron Imbroglio & Foreign Investors
IT WAS PERHAPS inevitable that the raging controversy over the
Dabhol Power Company (DPC) would be recognised by the new
American administration as a problem, big enough to cloud the
flow of foreign direct investment into India. Enron's investment
in the DPC and hence in the capital-starved power sector of the
country has been noteworthy. It has been till date the single
largest foreign direct investment in the country. Moreover, when
no other power project of a similar size is anywhere near
completion, the DPC has been on the verge of commissioning its
second phase. However, recent and continuing wrangles between the
DPC on the one side and the Maharashtra State Electricity Board
(MSEB) and the State Government on the other show that the large
investment in the most critical infrastructure sector has come at
a stiff price, with the final bill for a fair and mutually
acceptable resolution likely to be huge. Forming a large
percentage of that bill would be the fallout of the legal
conundrum the project has been pushed into.
The Enron controversy, as it is better known, represents all that
could go wrong, even though the original intentions on both sides
of the present divide might have been above board. Right from its
formulation and its cost estimates, to the choice of fuel and of
course the power purchase agreement (PPA), the project has been
highly controversial. Even though two successive State
Governments have signed and reworked the PPA, the Godbole
committee has found a complete abdication of governance. The
controversy reached a boiling point last month when Enron, the
chief promoter, invoked the force majeure clause and set in
motion a train of events that indicated its intent to quit. The
reason cited then - its inability to make the MSEB and the State
Government meet their contractual obligations - is the central
point of the whole dispute. Subsequent defaults by the Board and
the tough posturing of both sides have inevitably lessened the
chances of reconciliation without rancour. Another round of
renegotiation that is going on is perhaps the last hope but the
parallel recourse to legal remedies has clouded its outcome, to
say the least.
For a country that is in keen competition with China and others
to attract foreign investment, the legal troubles over Enron are
most unwelcome. For long projected as having a superior legal
system, the likely delay will negate one of the country's
principal selling points to foreign investors. More fundamental,
of course, is the bad publicity in the wake of the reneging on
contracts by the State Government and the MSEB, with the Central
Government also drawn in through the counter-guarantees. Whatever
be the merits of a recent proposal to strike at the basis of the
original contracts - citing incompetence or even malfeasance on
the Indian side - it is evident that plenty of damage has already
been done to the interests of India in relation to foreign
investors.
That point would certainly weigh with the Government as it tries
to mobilise considerably more FDI than the $4 billions to $4.5
billions that have come in each of the past two years. While
facilitating policy changes are contemplated, it would be
necessary to project the Enron fiasco as one of a kind, never to
be repeated in future contracts. In turn, that suggests a much
higher level of competence, legal acumen and political governance
than what was seen here. Reinforcing that point is the fact that
the new FDI flows are more through mergers and acquisitions and
less in greenfield ventures. The country's familiarity with deal
making and its capacity to evaluate the associated costs of this
route will be put to test.
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