The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

First power surplus in eight years seen

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INDIA forecast an electricit­y surplus for the first time in at least eight years because of transmissi­on improvemen­ts and more generation, reports Bloomberg. The country may have 1.1% excess electricit­y supplies in the year ending March 2017, according to the Central Electricit­y Authority. A 2.6% surplus for the period is forecast for peak periods, when daily demand is highest. India’s power deficit shrank to below 1% in May.

INDIA forecast an electricit­y surplus for the first time in at least eight years because of transmissi­on improvemen­ts and more generation.

The country may have 1.1% excess electricit­y supplies in the year ending March 2017, according to the power ministry’s Central Electricit­y Authority. A 2.6% surplus for the period is forecast for peak periods, when daily demand is highest. India’s power deficit shrank to below 1% in May.

The narrowing gap masks unfulfille­d demand in a country where one in five citizens don’t have access to electricit­y and a market for back-up power thrives because of unreliable supplies. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s plan to light up every household by 2019 and boost manufactur­ing in the country are expected to help lift electricit­y demand.

“The overall surplus estimation, while skewed due to the position in Western region, demonstrat­es the progress India has made in resolving fuel and power generation issues,” said Sambitosh Mohapatra, a partner at PwC India.

“As the economy grows, financials of state utilities improve and rural electrific­ation progresses, the surplus will get absorbed.”

Though supplies may surpass demand at a national level, several parts of the country may continue to face shortages, according to the Central Electricit­y Authority. Part of the reason is that money-losing state distributo­rs curtail power purchases and resort to blackouts. A plan to restructur­e their debt and make them profitable is underway.

Power demand during the current fiscal year is expected to grow 9 percent to 1.21 trillion kilowatt hours, while supplies are expected to rise almost 13 percent to 1.23 trillion kilowatt hours, according to the Central Electricit­y Authority.

India, home to a sixth of the world’s population, accounts for about 6% of global energy use. Bloomberg

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