Business Standard

POWER TRANSMISSI­ON MOST ATTRACTIVE INFRA INVESTMENT: CRISIL

- SHREYA JAI

The power transmissi­on sector in India is the most attractive to invest in currently, followed byroads and highways, and renewablee­nergy, according to the Infrastruc­ture Invest ability Index, prepared by rating agency CR IS IL. In its first such report, which tracks, measures, and assesses the developmen­t, maturity, and investment attractive­ness of infrastruc­ture, CRISIL said India would see an investment of close to ~3,000 cr ore per day in the infrastruc­ture sector, and 56 percent more than the ~37 lakhcro re projected spend between FY13 and FY17. SHREYA JAI reports

The power transmissi­on sector in India is the most attractive to invest in currently, followed by roads and highways, and renewable energy, according to the Infrastruc­ture Investabil­ity Index, prepared by rating agency CRISIL.

In its first such report, which tracks, measures, and assesses the developmen­t, maturity, and investment attractive­ness of infrastruc­ture, CRISIL said India would see an investment of close to ~3,000 crore per day in the infrastruc­ture sector, and 56 per cent more than the ~37 lakh crore projected spend between FY13 and FY17.

“Spending such a magnitude requires an expeditiou­s resolution of the problem of stressed assets in banking, front-ending of bankable projects, comprehens­ive retooling of public-private partnershi­p frameworks, and deepening of the infrastruc­ture financing ecosystem, which is of tremendous importance,” said Ashu Suyash, managing director and chief executive officer, CRISIL.

The report said thermal power generation, power distributi­on, and the railways needed a lot of facilitati­on before they could draw in big money. The urban sector, which is the least attractive right now, also needed a lot of attention, it said.

For the power sector, the report expressed concern over the increasing stressed assets. “There is 51 gigawatt (Gw) of stressed assets (thermal and gas) because of non-availabili­ty of coal/lack of power purchase agreement and another 23 Gw of under-constructi­on projects. Thereby, ~4 lakh crore of debt is likely to become non-performing asset if prevailing issues are not resolved,” said the report. It also said slippages in the UDAY (Ujwal Discom Assurance Yojana) target would result in significan­t cash losses for discoms.

Apart from reviving hydropower and gas-based power, the report suggested further reforms in power distributi­on with private franchisee­s, separating the content and carriage businesses, and tariff hikes based on inflation.

Regarding power transmissi­on, the report said that investing $3.5 billion in the green energy corridor by FY22 and the proposed implementa­tion of general network access would boost the prospects of the sector. It, however, expressed concern that slow state-level planning and right-of-way issues could drag down growth.

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