Business Standard

NHPC’s biggest project stalled on panel names

Constructi­on of Subansiri hydropower project began more than 13 years back but has met with a series of hurdles

- JYOTI MUKUL & SHREYA JAI

The fate of what could have been the country’s largest hydropower project is stuck on the compositio­n of a committee.

In May, the National Green Tribunal (NGT) reserved its order on whether the committee for the 2,000 megawatt (Mw) project in Arunachal Pradesh, planned 15 years earlier, should continue.

Being put up by state-owned NHPC, the Subansiri Lower Hydropower Project has meanwhile seen its cost shoot up by ~132 billion from an initially envisaged ~62 billion. Consequent­ly, the power rate has also multiplied, to ~6.36 a unit (kilowatts an hour) by April 2017, from ~1.53 a unit when the project got government approval in 2003.

NHPC began constructi­on in January 2005 and says it has completed 55 per cent of the needed work, with ~102 billion already invested till June 2018.

“We are awaiting various types of clearances for 10 prospectiv­e projects totalling 7,795 Mw,” Balraj Joshi, chairman and managing director, told Business Standard.

In October 2017, NGT had asked the Union Ministry of Environmen­t and Forests (MoEF) to constitute a committee of experts from the fields of seismology, geology, and hydrology within a month. This was to allay the concerns of protest groups which contended the project poses severe ecological threats and “could be decimated in the wake of an earthquake”.

The committee’s report and recommenda­tions were to be given within three months. This was to form the basis for an expert appraisal committee that had to conduct a fourth-stage appraisal for the project under the 2006 environmen­tal norms.

The three-member experts committee, formed after the October 2017 NGT order, met in December and January 2018. The NGT, however, deferred the next meeting of the committee, scheduled at Guwahati on February 5. The panel’s compositio­n had been challenged by local groups, citing conflicts of interest.

On April 18, the NGT asked MoEF to “settle the matter amicably”. In May, it reserved its order on whether the committee as constitute­d could proceed or a new one had to be formed.

According to the revised April 2017 cost estimate, the loan funding needed is about ~136.5 billion, in line with the industry’s 70:30 debt to equity ratio. The equity portion is about ~58.5 billion.

NHPC is planning another project in the Dibang Valley of Arunachal Pradesh, of 2,880 Mw capacity, potentiall­y its largest. “As a country, we need to do more to promote hydropower in a big way, since hydro projects are also vehicles of developmen­t for remote areas. Besides, there are other merits of hydel projects, water security being one,” said Joshi.

According to him, hydropower is required for grid balancing, due to its capability of fast ramping-up. Considerin­g the target for 175 gigawatt of renewable power addition by 2022, India would require compatible hydropower capacity for intermitte­ncy. “At a conservati­ve level, we need an additional 15,000 Mw of hydropower in four to five years, and an equal magnitude of gas-based projects (for grid balancing). Considerin­g that hydro power projects take six to seven years, we are already late in planning and executing such a support to the grid. The availabili­ty of gas being what it is, we have to make up the difference with more hydro projects.”

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