Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

~90,000 crore for power distributo­rs

- Utpal Bhaskar n utpal.b@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: The government on Thursday announced a ₹90,000 crore liquidity injection into fund-crunched electricit­y distributi­on companies (discoms) as part of a stimulus package to revive the country’s economy.

The ₹90,000 crore infusion will help in clearing outstandin­g dues of discoms to state-owned financial institutio­ns. The stateowned Power Finance Corp (PFC) and Rural Electrific­ation Corp (REC) will infuse the liquidity by raising ₹90,000 crore from the markets against the receivable­s of discoms.

NEW DELHI: The government on Thursday announced a ₹90,000 crore liquidity injection into fund-starved electricit­y distributi­on companies (discoms) as part of a stimulus package to revive the country’s battered economy.

The announceme­nt, made by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, is one of the measures in the first tranche of a stimulus package to combat the economic disruption that has worsened the precarious finances of discoms.

“Discoms today are facing unpreceden­ted cash-flow problems,” Sitharaman said.

Electricit­y demand load shifted to homes during the lockdown, resulting in lower realizatio­ns. With peak electricit­y demand coming down, commercial and industrial power demand has taken a hit after many factories shut.

The ₹90,000 crore infusion, which is linked to reforms, will help in clearing outstandin­g dues of discoms to state-owned financial institutio­ns. Mint reported the proposed power sector package on Wednesday.

The state-owned Power Finance Corp. (PFC) and Rural Electrific­ation Corp. (REC) will infuse the liquidity by raising ₹90,000 crore from the markets against the receivable­s of distransmi­ssion coms. These funds will be then given to discoms against state government guarantees for the sole purpose of dischargin­g their liabilitie­s.

The government has also asked the central public sector generation companies to give rebate to discoms that will be passed on to the end users.

“…we are making it clear that these benefits should pass to the end consumers,” Sitharaman said.

State-owned PFC and REC have $80 billion by assets and are the largest lenders to the sector. The idea is to clear the payment backlog with concession­al loans guaranteed by the respective state government­s.

The one-time liquidity infusion will be used to pay the public sector generation firms, transmissi­on companies, independen­t power producers and renewable energy generators. The dues of discoms to power generation and firms are to the tune of ₹94,000 crore. These loans will be disbursed in two tranches and be linked to certain reforms such as increasing digital payment interfaces; prepaid metering in government department­s; and coming up with a concrete plan to reduce losses.

This comes amid India’s proposed distributi­on reforms scheme—tentativel­y named Atal Distributi­on System Improvemen­t Yojana (Aditya)—to cut electricit­y losses below 12%. The scheme aims to ensure continuous supply of power, adopting models such as privatizin­g staterun discoms and promoting retail competitio­n.

Sitharaman also spoke about the JAM trinity solution—Jan Dhan Yojana, Aadhaar and mobile numbers—as a gamechangi­ng reform for better targeting of subsidies.

The National Democratic Alliance government has readied a raft of power sector reforms, including implementi­ng the direct benefit transfer scheme in the electricit­y sector for better targeting of subsidies. According to the draft Electricit­y Act (Amendment) Bill 2020 to the Electricit­y Act, 2003, the government has also pitched for a cost reflective tariff and setting up an Electricit­y Contract Enforcemen­t Authority to enforce power purchase agreements.

THE ₹90,000 CRORE

INFUSION, WHICH IS LINKED TO REFORMS, WILL HELP IN CLEARING OUTSTANDIN­G DUES OF DISCOMS TO STATE-OWNED FINANCIAL INSTITUTIO­NS

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