Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

UP lags in power supply again, demand-supply gap widens

- Brajendra K Parashar bkparashar@hindustant­imes.com ▪

LUCKNOW: Uttar Pradesh has emerged as the country’s most power deficit state yet again after Jammu & Kashmir with the widening of demand-supply gap, according to a latest report on the position of countrywid­e power supply.

The report released by the Central Electricit­y Authority (CEA), a body under the union power ministry, has put the peak deficit at more than 10% which indicates that supplying power round-the-clock in UP from April next year, as announced by the Yogi Adityanath government, may be an uphill task.

“If the state is not able to meet the restricted/limited demand now, meeting the unrestrict­ed demand when all the villages and cities are proposed to be provided round-the-clock power will not be easy,” said a senior official at the UP Power Corporatio­n Ltd (UPPCL) requesting anonymity.

According to CEA report, the average peak demand in UP between April 2017 and March 2018 was 20,274 mw against the availabili­ty of 18,061 mw with the state not being able to meet the peak demand to the extent of 2,213 mw.

The peak deficit in UP during the period stood at 10.9% which is not only more than the all-India average of 2% but also the highest in the country after the perenniall­y power-starved J&K where the peak shortage was 20%.

Significan­tly, the peak deficit in UP has increased this time. The state experience­d the peak demand of 17,183 mw against the peak availabili­ty of 15,501 mw between April 2016 and March 2017 with the demand-supply gap being 9.8%.

The demand shot up by 3,091 mw during 2017-18 as compared to 2016-17. The deficit increased by 1.1% unlike in 2016-17 when it was down by 4.8% vis-à-vis in 2015-16.

The report says that the peak deficit in states under the northern region was only nominal at 0.4% in Delhi, 1.4% in Haryana, 1.3% in Rajasthan, while remaining states – Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhan­d and Chandigarh – had no peak shortage at all.

Among regions, peak deficit was the highest in the north-east (4.1%), followed by the northern region (3.8%), western region (0.8%) and southern region (0.2%).

There was no peak demandsupp­ly gap in the eastern region. The peak/off-peak demand for demand is the highest in UP after Maharashtr­a.

Sources said the situation had gradually improved in UP during last three-four years prior to which the peak deficit used to be around 25% or even more.

“But much has to be done especially when the demand is set to touch a new high after 1.50 crore rural households are electrifie­d by March 2019,” they said.

THE STATE EXPERIENCE­D THE PEAK DEMAND OF 17,183 MW AGAINST THE PEAK AVAILABILI­TY OF 15,501 MW BETWEEN APRIL 2016 AND MARCH 2017

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