Business Standard

Power Grid INVIT size may be less than 20% of target

- SHREYA JAI

The potential asset monetisati­on exercise of state-owned electricit­y transmissi­on operator Power Grid Corporatio­n of India (PGCIL) could be much lower than the ~10,000 crore expected by the government.

Close to ~2,000 crore worth of its assets, the company has told its investors, would be eligible for the Infrastruc­ture Investment Trust (INVIT) route. Proceeds from this would be used to pay higher dividend, depending on the profit recognised on such sale of assets or capital expenditur­e layout, the company said.

Power Grid plans to set up a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) wherein it will transfer some of its assets. This SPV would be part of the INVIT to be floated by Power Grid. Sources privy to the investor concall said the firm disclosed only some projects of those acquired through the cost-plus mode (directly awarded by the government) would be eligible, as they’d lose value during the transfer. “Broad guidelines for undertakin­g an INVIT are with the understand­ing that the rate for the consumer should not go up. Given the stamp duty, there will be cost implicatio­ns on transfer of assets to SPV. It seems difficult that the basket of cost-plus assets will be large at this point of time,” the firm is learnt to have told its investors.

Company executives said they, however, continue to explore the issue of transferri­ng their cost-plus assets and have held discussion­s with the Central Electricit­y Regulatory Commission. Regarding the assets it has acquired via the TBCB or tariff-based competitiv­e bidding route, executives said of the ~3,000 crore worth of such assets with Power Grid, projects totalling ~1,700 crore could comply for transfer to the INVIT.

“Transmissi­on service agreements have clauses which allow dilution of 51 per cent, 74 per cent and 100 per cent from the date of commission­ing to two years, two to five years and beyond five years (respective­ly),” said an investor.

In its presentati­on, Power Grid said the assets transferre­d to the INVIT would continue to be operated and maintained by it. PGCIL expects investment of ~2.8 trillion between 2020-21 and 2029-30 in inter-state projects and a similar amount in intra-state ones. Put together, the investment basket is expected to be ~560 crore.

Following the slowdown in the power sector, the company’s capital works have been on a downslide for four years. Since 2015, this has come down by 53 per cent to ~34,635 crore in 201819, owing to the decreasing number of new projects. Apart from state-owned NTPC adding generation capacity, no private power generator has applied for ‘long-term access’ or transmissi­on connectivi­ty since 2013.

In 2018, the central government said it was identifyin­g assets — including rail lines, national highways and power transmissi­on lines — for monetising through Invits.

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