Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Govt may cut funds for Chinese tech

State-run lenders may discourage states from using Chinese supplies by withholdin­g capital for such electricit­y projects

- Utpal Bhaskar utpal.b@livemint.com ■

NEW DELHI: India may tighten its economic squeeze on China with New Delhi planning to discourage states from using Chinese equipment and technology in the strategic power sector by withholdin­g funding to such projects from government­owned lenders to such projects if they use Chinese imports, two people aware of the developmen­t said.

State-run Power Finance Corp. Ltd (PFC), Rural Electrific­ation Corp. Ltd (REC) and Indian Renewable Energy Developmen­t Agency (IREDA) are the largest lenders to the Indian power sector and the move is expected to deter states from involving Chinese firms, which are usually the cheapest suppliers.

This will be in addition to providing low-cost funds to local power equipment makers to make them competitiv­e.

At stake are contracts worth billions of dollars under India’s proposed distributi­on reform programme—tentativel­y named Samarth—with an estieratio­n mated capital outlay of ₹3.5 lakh crore.

The scheme aims to slash electricit­y losses of power distributo­rs to under 12% and install prepaid smart meters across the power distributi­on chain, including 250 million households.

“The idea is to ensure they don’t use Chinese equipment or technology. These financing lines may be made conditiona­l to that,” said a government official cited above.

Apart from securing large orders in India’s clean energy space, large thermal power genproject contracts totalling around 48 gigawatt (GW) have been placed with Chinese manufactur­ers.

Also, firms use supervisor­y control and data acquisitio­n (Scada) systems from China in the electricit­y distributi­on space.

With mounting tensions along the India-China border, India is working on a wider decoupling exercise that involves imposing tariff and non-tariff barriers to check Chinese imports, including priorpermi­ssion requiremen­ts for power equipment imports from countries with which it has a conflict.

“Trade ties between India and China have seen a setback recently. The government had brought the FDI in Indian companies from ‘bordering nations’ under an approval route from the automatic route in April 2020. Modi also made ‘self-reliance’ a key point of his post-Covid-19 stimulus,” Jefferies Equity Research wrote in a June 24 report.

A power ministry spokespers­on did not respond to queries emailed by Mint on Saturday.

 ?? HT ?? ■
Low-cost funds will be provided to local power equipment makers to spur competitio­n.
HT ■ Low-cost funds will be provided to local power equipment makers to spur competitio­n.

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