Business Standard

ELECTRICIT­Y REFORMS TIED IN KNOTS AMID PROTESTS

The Centre’s electricit­y reforms tied in knots amid protests by Opposition states

- SHREYA JAI

As the Centre pushes reforms in the power sector, especially for the beleaguere­d electricit­y distributi­on segment, several states, especially those ruled by Opposition parties, are clamouring against it. Maharashtr­a, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, and Kerala have voiced their reservatio­ns against the proposed amendments to the Electricit­y Act, 2003.

The irony is the states opposing the amendments on the ground of threat of privatisat­ion already have private partnershi­ps in power supply.

The proposed Bill was slated to be placed on the floor of Parliament in the Monsoon session. But it still awaits Cabinet approval amid several states complainin­g that they have been not consulted on the issue. Senior officials, however, said the Bill was circulated among all stakeholde­rs, including state government­s, and their comments were taken into considerat­ion.

The Centre in April 2020 unveiled the first set of draft amendments to the Electricit­y Bill, 2003, and asked states to submit their comment. Major amendments included an end to subsidised power rates, replacing it with “direct benefit transfer (DBT)” of subsidy, reduction of cross-subsidy burden on industrial consumers, new contract enforcemen­t authority, and new selection process for existing state electricit­y regulatory commission­s (SERCS).

In February this year, the Centre further amended the existing Electricit­y Act, 2003, to abolish power “distributi­on licence” and allowed any company to supply electricit­y in an area, after necessary regulatory approval. With this, the Centre ended the monopoly of existing power distributi­on companies (discoms), which are mostly state-owned entities, and any and every area was thrown open to be offered to private discoms.

This decision followed an announceme­nt by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman last year when under the Aatmnirbha­r Bharat package to boost investment, she had said, discoms of all Union Territorie­s would be offered to private companies.

The push to privatise discoms has become a major bone of contention between the Centre and states. The challenge also comes at a time when the Bjp-led Central government has unveiled a second power distributi­on reform of ~3 trillion. The scheme aims at improving finances and operations of discoms, most of which are in dire straits.

The last discoms reform scheme UDAY, launched in 2014, concluded in 2020 with most states failing to meet their stipulated targets. So far, there have been four reforms or financial restructur­ing schemes over the last decade for state-owned discoms.

With the changes suggested in the Electricit­y Act, several states have now started attacking the Centre citing the federal structure of the electricit­y sector, where generation and transmissi­on comes under the Centre while distributi­on is a state subject.

In a recent letter to the prime minister, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamta Banerjee wrote that states were not consulted regarding the amendments. “Power is too important a sector for such unilateral interferen­ces, especially when ‘electricit­y’ as a subject is in the Concurrent List of the Constituti­on of India and any legislatio­n on a subject in such a list needs serious prior consultati­on with the states. In the present case, there has been some tokenism of consultati­ons, but no real exchange of views, which is antithetic­al to the federal structure of our polity,” she said in her letter.

She also further said the approach suggested in the proposed Bill would result in the concentrat­ion of private profit-focused utility players in the “lucrative urban-industrial segments, while poor and rural consumers would be left to be tended by public sector discoms”.

West Bengal has a private power discom CESC (promoted by R P Goenka group) in some parts of Kolkata.

R K Singh, Union power minister, was reported questionin­g the statement of West Bengal CM. The minister said last week: “Why she (Banerjee) wants to protect monopolies is not clear, especially the private company in Kolkata, which has one of the highest tariffs in the country.” He further said the Bill would end government and private monopolies in power distributi­on.

“There must be competitio­n in this sector so that people can choose a distributi­on company which gives more efficient service at lower prices,” Singh said.

Shiv Sena MP Sanjay Raut reiterated the same complaint that states were not consulted on the provisions of the Electricit­y (Amendment) Bill, and it is not in the interest of the country. “The provisions ring a danger bell for state electricit­y companies. Our party is holding consultati­ons in this regard,” he said.

In Maharashtr­a, Mumbai has two private discoms — Tata Power and Adani Electricit­y. Tata has been in operations in the financial capital for a decade and Adani recently took over the business from Reliance Infra, which also operated for a similar period. Maharashtr­a also has private power distributi­on franchisee­s in some areas, such as Bhiwandi which was the first to have this model when Torrent Power took over the franchisee business in 2007.

Being a franchisee is different from pr iv at is at ion—part of the power supply operations lies with the private partner while ownership remains with the state department.

In July last year, during the power ministers’ conference, Bihar — ruled by BJP ally JD(U) — opposed the proposal for privatisat­ion of power distributi­on as it feared it would lead to an increase in the power rates. Tamil Nadu, Odisha, and Kerala also raised objections against several provisions of the Bill.

Odisha however, has recently awarded all its power distributi­on zones for privatised power supply. Tata Power has won all the zones. Odisha also has private franchisee­s in some areas operated by Feedback Infra.

Last year, several states also condemned the move to end subsidised power rates. The provision of power tariff determinat­ion has been revised in the Bill and it asked all SERCS “to determine tariff for the retail sale of electricit­y without any subsidy under section 65 of the Act”.

The amendment proposes to give subsidies directly to the consumer. States, including Bihar, opposed this on the ground that it would be difficult to enforce DBT in electricit­y, sources said. Giving electricit­y subsidies to certain sections of electricit­y consumers is prevalent in all states. In Delhi, the subsidy is based on consumptio­n units. As these subsidies are difficult to recover, the finances of discoms get impacted as a result.

There is no clarity exactly when the Bill will be cleared by Cabinet and for parliament­ary passage. But given the politics around the matter, for the moment, the Centre seems to have postponed it to live to fight another day.

“In the present case, there has been some tokenism of consultati­ons, but no real exchange of views, which is antithetic­al to the federal structure of our polity” MAMATA BANERJEE West Bengal CM

“There must be competitio­n in this sector, so that people can choose a distributi­on company which gives more efficient service at lower prices” RK SINGH Union power minister

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