Business Standard

Centre, states to share cost of ~3-trn discom reform scheme

Umbrella scheme to include grants for schemes of IPDS, DDUGJY, and have loss-reduction targets

- SHREYA JAI

The new ‘reform-linked distributi­on scheme’, aimed at overhaulin­g the power distributi­on sector and building robust supply infrastruc­ture, will subsume all existing schemes into it, with the cost being shared between the Centre and states.

The total capital outlay of the scheme is estimated at ~3.12 trillion, of which 60 per cent would be a Central grant, with the balance borne by states.

In its initial submission to the finance ministry, the Union power ministry has asked for a Central grant of ~1.8 trillion with a liability period till March 2022.

“The power ministry has proposed to the expenditur­e department (under the finance ministry) that for two years, no other Central grant would be needed for the power distributi­on sector. This would include the grant for existing schemes of IPDS and DDUGJY,” said an official.

The Deendayal Upadhyay Gram Jyoti Yojana (DDUGJY) is aimed at metering every rural household and improving electricit­y infrastruc­ture in villages. The Integrated Power Developmen­t Scheme (IPDS) targets improvemen­t in electricit­y infrastruc­ture in urban areas, along with the introducti­on of smart meters and IT systems in power supply.

Both schemes were launched in 2015, and the remaining Central grant of ~23,000 crore will be part of the new scheme. The power ministry had, last year, proposed a scheme for reviving the power distributi­on sector with a capital outlay of ~2 trillion. It entailed 40-60 per cent of Central grant if states took up reforms suggested by the Centre.

However, the finance ministry did not approve of the grant portion. Most states, too, opposed the proposal of having a private franchisee and the end of subsidies that were part of the reform package.

Under the current proposal, the power ministry says savings on account of an improved infrastruc­ture would be used in other schemes, and therefore no additional Central grant would be needed. Officials said the scheme was under inter-ministeria­l discussion­s and would be presented to the Expenditur­e Finance Committee (EFC) soon.

The scheme would include pending targets under the DDUGJY and IPDS, and have provisions to build better infrastruc­ture, smart meters, and a private franchisee model for improving power supply.

In DDUGJY, close to ~70,000 crore of the total sanctioned grant of ~1.03 trillion has already been sanctioned for various projects. In IPDS, the total sanctioned Central grant is ~20,000 crore, of which ~13,859 crore has been released for several projects including ‘system strengthen­ing, IT systems, and smart metering’ etc.

Further, the power ministry has stated that funds under the scheme will be released in proportion to the achievemen­t by discoms, against the mutually agreed targets in the action plan. UDAY had a similar scheme design, wherein funds for schemes and loans by financial institutio­ns were linked to loss reduction by discoms.

Business Standard had earlier reported that the scheme would have a five-year time period for discoms to improve their operationa­l and financial performanc­e. UDAY concluded in FY20 with most states failing to meet their stipulated targets.

The Aggregate Technical & Commercial (AT&C) losses, or power supply loss due to inefficien­t systems, was supposed to reduce to 15 per cent and average cost-revenue (ACS-ARR) gap of discoms down to zero by FY20.

However, AT&C loss stands at 23.9 per cent and cost-revenue gap at 0.53 paisa per unit, according to the UDAY portal. The numbers are the national average of the last available data of all discoms for FY20, and indicative data of six states for Q1FY21. The cumulative financial loss for all discoms stood at ~18,000 crore during FY20.

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