Business Standard

MORE STRESS IN PIPELINE, 25 Gw AWAITS RESOLUTION

Future is uncertain for projects close to 25 Gw, across energy sources, owing to several regulation­s

- SHREYA JAI

Stress in the power sector is continuing beyond insolvency proceeding­s. Due to regulatory issues, it is unlikely to end in the current round of insolvency cases.

After coal-based power plants with a capacity of close to 30 gigawatt (Gw) landed in insolvency courts, there is a fresh list of cases that could fall in the stressed assets category, if issues are not resolved. The list includes stranded gas power projects not receiving fuel supply, stuck hydropower projects, and privately-owned operation coal projects to which banks have refused to lend further. According to industry calculatio­ns, the future is uncertain for power projects of close to 25 Gw, across energy sources, owing to several regulation­s. SHREYA JAI writes

Stress in the power sector is continuing beyond insolvency proceeding­s. Due to regulatory issues, it is unlikely to end in the current round of insolvency cases.

After coal-based power plants with a capacity of close to 30 gigawatt (Gw) landed in insolvency courts, there is a fresh list of cases that could fall in the stressed assets category if issues are not resolved. The list includes stranded gas power projects not receiving fuel supply, stuck hydropower projects, and privately-owned operation coal projects to which banks have refused to lend further.

According to industry calculatio­ns, the future is uncertain for power projects of close to 25 Gw, across energy sources, owing to several regulation­s. The first in line are gasbased power projects. Of the 24- Gw gas-based capacity in the country, 14 Gw is not receiving domestic gas supply. Last year, under the government scheme for providing subsidised gas supply to plants, plants of 8 Gw received gas supply and are running at a 40 per cent load factor.

Numerical, a data aggregatio­n platform, estimates gasbased projects of 7.5 Gw will be stranded with a cumulative debt exposure of ~480 billion. As against the daily supply of 13.5 million cubic metres of gas under the government scheme, the gas power plants’ demand is 117 million cubic metres daily. The Centre discontinu­ed the scheme after two rounds.

“The ones running are operating at below optimal rates to recover their fixed cost and serve their interest amount. The others which don’t have any supply will end up in debt spiral soon. Some gas projects are already under strategic debt restructur­ing and/or landed in the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). There are more in line,” said a senior executive of a leading power company.

Operationa­lly and financiall­y robust privately-owned coal-based power projects of around 15 Gw are in a quandary. According to new emission norms set for thermal power units, these projects have to install flue-gas desulfuris­ation (FGD) or emission control technology by 2020. Banks, however, have refused to fund this.

Power industry executives say bankers have turned down the request of future lending, citing the exposure limit to the power sector and the record of stressed assets.

“Due to regulatory changes, which impact the payment to them, banks have refused to lend further to the thermal power industry. This could create a precarious situation. While the cost is pass-through, fresh lending is needed,” said an executive.

The Associatio­n of Power Producers (APP), the representa­tive body of the thermal power sector, in its letter to banks said the FGD cost was around ~4 million per megawatt (Mw).

Considerin­g the case of a 1,000-Mw thermal power plant, roughly ~4 billion would be required for FGD, where the loan required would be around ~3 billion. “It would be unfortunat­e that a project with investment­s of around ~70 billion would be exposed to a major risk of becoming a non-performing asset due to non-availabili­ty of financing of ~3 billion,” the APP said in its letter to the Indian Banks’ Associatio­n.

The third, small in amount but with a large impact, are hydropower projects which have been languishin­g for several reasons — mostly delays due to protests, environmen­t norms, change in regulation­s, etc. According to the data available publicly, hydropower projects of close to 5 Gw, mostly state-owned and private, are stranded. No new hydro capacity has been added in the past six years, with the sector’s share being 13 per cent in the energy mix.

Sector experts point out with the rising solar and wind capacity — now a 15 per cent share in the energy pie — the need for balancing hydropower is more than needed.

Numerical says 15 projects are stranded. They include Ratle (850 Mw) of GVK, Maheshwar (400 Mw) in Madhya Pradesh, Koyna (80 Mw) in Maharashtr­a, and Teesta-IV (500 Mw) of Lanco. The last is in the NCLT and state-owned NHPC is expected to bid for it.

Sector executives said this put pressure on the work of the High Power Empowered Committee, set up with the Cabinet secretary as chairman. The committee is supposed to suggest ways to prevent further stress in the sector. The committee had its first meeting two weeks ago and has to submit its report by September 29.

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