Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Wary of farmers backing out, state shelves nofreepowe­r tubewell plan

SABOTAGE FEAR Authoritie­s fear farmers will not pay bill, later seek inclusion in subsidy category

- Gurpreet Singh Nibber gurpreet.nibber@hindustant­imes.com n

CHANDIGARH:Apprehendi­ng that the farmers will destroy meters and not pay bills, the Punjab government has shelved a policy of giving out-of-turn tubewell connection­s to those who forego free electricit­y supply.

The government plans to review the policy and come up with a condition that such applicants pay annual charges in advance, it is learnt.

Under the scheme rolled out in September last — it was pulled back 10 days ago by the Punjab State Power Corporatio­n Limited (PSPCL) on the state government’s directions — 11,000 applicatio­ns were received. Otherwise, the state has nearly 14 lakh tubewell power connection­s and 1 lakh applicatio­ns are pending under priority categories alone.

There are no meters on tubewell connection­s for now, and the state government pays PSPCL for the supply given to them. The subsidy has been climbing, and the government has been defaulting on it.

Applicants under the metered policy were to be handed out connection­s on top priority, on first come-first served basis, but the authoritie­s became wary. Why?

“Almost 95% of all these applicatio­ns came from Bathinda and Muktsar areas. We got to know that farmers aligned with a union applied in large numbers and decided not to pay bills later,” said a senior PSPCL officer on condition of anonymity.

“These farmers would have later demanded that they be given free power too,” he added.

Payment of the subsidy has been a contentiou­s issue. Even the Punjab State Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (PSERC) noted recently that there is shortfall in payment by the government on account of subsidy for financial years 2016-17 and 2017-18. Backlog as on March 31, 2017, was Rs 2919 crore, which shot up to Rs 4,769 crore as on March 31, 2018. The government told the commission that its financial position is not good.

The PSERC even suggested that farmers be charged for power if the government fails to pay the PSPCL.

Meanwhile, Bharatiya Kisan Union (Dakaunda) general secretary Jagmohan Singh said, “We will continue to oppose meters on tubewells as the government has from time to time promised free water and electricit­y to the agricultur­e sector; it should keep that promise.”

He denied that the union asked farmers to get tubewells under the metered policy and then not pay bills. “Such policies anyway raise questions on the government’s intentions; it appears that it wants to eventually charge for power to all tubewells, in a phased manner,” he added.

PSPCL chairman-cum-managing director Baldev Singh Sran said policy matters are the prerogativ­e of the government. “Whenever the government seeks feedback, we give it,” he said. According to PSPCL director OP Garg, the state government asked PSPCL not to process the applicatio­ns received under the policy as “it is being put under a review”.

It must be mentioned here that the Punjab State Farmers’ and Farm Workers’ Commission, in a draft policy, recommende­d withdrawal of free power to farmers who own more than four hectares of land or pay income tax. Though a politicall­y sensitive issue, power subsidy, which has been ballooning since 1997 when the then chief minister Parkash Singh Badal made electricit­y free for all farmers, has taken its toll on the state exchequer.

WILL CLEAR ‘TATKAL’ PLEAS OF SAD-BJP TERM

The state’s Congress government has, however, decided to clear 50,000 tubewell connection applicatio­ns under the contentiou­s Chairman Quota Tatkal Scheme launched at the fag end of the previous SAD-BJP government last year. Each farmer paid at least Rs 50,000.

“We have decided to give these connection­s in a phased manner.” Garg said. There were 98,000 applicatio­ns.

 ?? HT FILE PHOTO ?? Under the scheme rolled out in September, 11,000 applicatio­ns were received. Punjab has 14 lakh tubewell connection­s and a long waiting list.
HT FILE PHOTO Under the scheme rolled out in September, 11,000 applicatio­ns were received. Punjab has 14 lakh tubewell connection­s and a long waiting list.

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