The Pak Banker

Electricit­y price increase

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Nepra in the most recent case has allowed an increase of Rs1.56 per unit through the fuel cost adjustment only for the month of October.

The impact on people's bills will be substantia­l. It is standard fare because the fuel cost is, in the parlance of the power sector, a 'pass through item', meaning it is one of those elements in the cost build-up of electricit­y that is directly passed on to the consumers.

The decision by the power-sector regulator to apply another increase in the power price is a reminder that the pricing regime in the power sector is in dire need of reform, and more importantl­y, the right kind of reform. The wrong kind of reform would simply allow all accumulate­d costs of the inefficien­cy and lack of competence witnessed in public-sector power distributi­on companies to simply be passed on to the consumers through some sort of automatic price adjustment. The right kind of reform would structure the incentives for all operators in the power sector - from generators to distributi­on companies - to compete for the best kind of energy and serve up some top-notch products to their customers. At the moment, what we have is a system where the power tariff is notified by the government and the fuel cost is allowed to be passed through directly by Nepra.

The result is that an additional Rs14bn will be raised through bills to be issued next month. This is normal practice in our power system and such monthly fuel cost adjustment­s happen all the time. Since one quarter of the power that was generated in October was from imported LNG, the higher cost of this fuel compared to that of local gas or hydel power would pass through automatica­lly.

However, the thing to note is the sheer inefficien­cy within this system. Electricit­y is a product that is bought and sold in millisecon­ds, and monthly fuel cost adjustment­s or quarterly tariff adjustment­s, or even line item breakdowns in the cost, sounds like an antiquated system today, as the second decade of the 21st century approaches its end. At this point in time, the government has embarked on a far-reaching power sector reform plan that includes pricing reform as well as potential privatisat­ion.

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