Business Standard

Legal, admin changes key to Mundra stake sale

- AMRITHA PILLAY

Industry experts see administra­tive and legal challenges before a solution is arrived at over Tata Power and other imported coal-based power producers’ offer to sell stakes in their stressed assets.

Tat a Power last week asked Gujarat Urja Vikas Nigam (GUVNL) to buy 51 per cent equity in the 4,000-Mw Mundra Ultra Mega Power Project (UMPP) for a token ~1. Adani Power and Essar Power, which also have power projects based on imported coal, are contemplat­ing similar moves.

“Case-2 bidding does not allow for change in shareholdi­ng. But, this may be treated as an extraordin­ary situation and one could reopen the contract if all stakeholde­rs agree,” said Pramod Deo, former chairman of the Central Electricit­y Regulatory Commission.

Deo is among those who heard the case on compensato­ry rates to Tata Power’s and Adani Power’s Mundra (in Kutch) power plants.

States are unlikely to agree to such an arrangemen­t because the assets will remain financiall­y unviable as imported coal prices stay high, according to an executive with a consultanc­y firm.

Kameswara Rao, partner with PwC India, said, “It can be an administra­tive challenge, as the capacity is contracted to multiple states and there is little precedence for such buyouts. However, the asset is new, technicall­y sound, and with a modest tariff revision, will generate strong profits and command a good valuation. So, a mature state utility cannot but give it serious considerat­ion.”

The Dabhol power plant is one instance where a state utility stepped in to buy a stake in a power plant. The project, however, continues to face financial difficulti­es.

“Losses of a subsidiary in which the holding company holds a 49 per cent stake do not show up in the latter’s financial performanc­e. Such a move will help ring-fence financial distress among private power producers,” the executive of the consultanc­y said.

Tata Power holds the Mundra plant through its subsidiary, Coastal Gujarat Power. Adani Power recently carved out the Mundra asset into a separate subsidiary.

Most experts said unless tariffs were reworked, any sale would only translate into a transfer of financial stress. “It is challengin­g to hold on to any project which, at a certain tariff, becomes a continued drain on the balance sheet. Such losses will worsen as global coal prices move higher. For efficient projects that do not deliver a reasonable return even after fully absorbing surpluses from coal mining, a regulatory work-out is needed,” Rao said. Other experts doubted if states would be willing to take on the additional burden with electricit­y being a politicall­y sensitive issue.

Tata Power has also offered to continue with the operations and maintenanc­e of the Mundra plant. This could be crucial in the case of Adani Power’s Mundra assets, where the equipment has been sourced from Chinese manufactur­ers.

“Offering to continue with operations will be crucial for Adani Power, as it may not be easy for a new operator to run a plant with Chinese equipment,” Deo explained.

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