Business Standard

Protecting power

The sector requires special attention

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Part and parcel of the nationwide lockdown announced to combat the spread of Covid-19 is that most industrial units are either shut or operating at a fraction of their capacity. One consequenc­e is that demand for electricit­y has fallen sharply, hitting a five-month low on just the first day of the national lockdown. Industrial demand, together with the offtake from Indian Railways — passenger services of which have also been suspended — constitute­s 40 per cent of national power demand. The other issue is that the industrial segment of the market is the paying section, which helps cross-subsidise domestic and household power consumptio­n. This comes at a bad time for electricit­y distributi­on companies, or discoms, which already owe over ~80,000 crore to generation companies. The number of consumers not able to pay their power dues will increase in this period, further hampering the discoms’ liquidity situation. If discoms are not able to buy power from generation companies, there is a real possibilit­y of widespread load shedding — which would not only hamper the output of those working from home but might have serious public-health effects if hospitals, quarantine centres, and other medical installati­ons find themselves without power to run lifesaving equipment.

The government has stepped in to try and ameliorate the situation by announcing a package targeted at the power sector. This would include a moratorium on debt repayment for three months as well as an instructio­n that generating companies should continue to supply to discoms. It has also relaxed the payment security mechanisms built into newer power-purchase agreements (PPAS). This might help manage the situation for some time. Yet both on a temporary and on a permanent basis, a more solid solution must be found. Given that India’s fragile banking sector is also overexpose­d to the power sector, a breakdown there will have severe effects on the broader economy and cripple India’s recovery from the sudden stop imposed by the national lockdown.

Also suffering is the one part of the power sector that had been a good-news story — the renewable energy sector. Capacity addition in the sector has been hit by a double whammy. First, the supply of new components that depends upon global supply chains, including those anchored in the People’s Republic of China, has been interrupte­d, and that has affected the speed of capacity buildup as well as the financial indicators of the sector. Second, the scarcity of dollars for emerging-market companies at the moment means that the renewables sector is having trouble raising money and repaying its debts. This section of the power sector requires special attention, given the government’s ambitious targets. Over the next few weeks, the government must come to a conclusion as to how to deal with this crisis in the power sector. One possibilit­y is for the Union government to shell out the money required to, first, guarantee the revenue flow for renewables and, second, to buy out the power-purchase agreements attached to older and less efficient and environmen­tally-friendly generators. This will free discoms to make newer and more sensible power-purchase agreements, which will have to be backed by the state government’s own guarantees.

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