Pakistan Today (Lahore)

AN EXCHANGE LED POWER MARKET WILL TRANSFORM SOUTH ASIAN POWER COOPERATIO­N

India needs power corridors in Bangladesh and Nepal

- SAMARA Ashrat The writer is a freelance columnist

CROSS Border Electricit­y Trade (CBET) has been taking place between South Asian countries under bilateral Memorandum of Understand­ings (Mous) /Power Trade Agreement (PTAS) over the last decade. Bangladesh and Nepal are waiting for India’s consent to start power export from Nepal to Bangladesh. India’s consent is necessary, as the transmissi­on line has to pass through India, which stands between the two countries. Both Nepal and Bangladesh will sit on May 15-16 to advance the power export plan further. The fifth meeting of the joint secretary-level Joint Working Group and the secretary-level Joint Steering Committee meetings will be held then.

Bangladesh will likely allow India to set up a 116200 km power transmissi­on corridor connecting India's northeaste­rn states, also known as the seven sisters. In return, India may allow Bangladesh to import power from Nepal and Bhutan using its transmissi­on line, which has been under negotiatio­n for years.

Technical data from the Power Grid Company of Bangladesh (PGCB) indicates that the capacity of the Bharamara-baharampur transmissi­on line is expected to increase from 2,400 MW to 3,200 MW soon. But Bangladesh imports 900-940 MW of electricit­y from India's Baharampur to Bheramara. Considerin­g the unutilized 2,040 MW grid line between Bangladesh and India, the Bangladesh Power Developmen­t Board (BPDB) proposed finalizing the existing grid to supply imported electricit­y from the GUKUL project in Nepal ion 2022. In response, Indian NVVN stated that an agreement for additional power supply to Bangladesh using the Indian grid line could only be signed after finalizing the new transmissi­on corridor between the two countries.

According to India's Central Electricit­y Regulatory Commission, the Indian authority can make cross-border trade where India is involved. There is a specific provision of a tripartite agreement that allows the Indian authority to sign the framework of bilateral agreements between the government of India and the government­s of the respective neighborin­g countries. In other words, Bangladesh and Nepal must sign bilateral agreements for cross-border electricit­y trade with India.

Bangladesh permitted the 21st Joint Steering Committee's meeting with India on power sector cooperatio­n. At the meeting, it was agreed that a tripartite power purchase agreement (PPA) would be concluded soon between Nepal, India, and Bangladesh, to facilitate the transfer of 500MW of cross-border electricit­y from Nepal's 900MW Upper Karnali hydropower project. The Joint Steering Committee also discussed implementi­ng a hydropower project in Bhutan through a tripartite investment between Bangladesh, Bhutan, and India. Nepal has an estimated hydropower potential of around 80,000MW, but the country can only produce around 2,000MW. Since 2019, Nepal has been exporting power to India at six Indian rupees per unit. Bangladesh imports 1,160MW of power from India through the Baharampur-bheramara and Tripuracum­illa cross-border grid lines. Bangladesh aims to increase the share of imported electricit­y in its energy mix up to 40 percent by 2041 when the total generation capacity will reach 60,000MW.

The northeaste­rn region is India's main hub for increasing its renewable energy capacity. India needs to tap the unexplored natural resources of its Northeast. This region has a potential of 33,100 MW of hydropower. Still, it is untapped because of the low electricit­y demand, while the absence of a power grid hinders the supply of excess electricit­y to its western parts. Electricit­y transmissi­on from northeaste­rn India to western parts of India requires a corridor through Bangladesh due to geo-political boundaries.

India and Bangladesh want to substantia­lly increase their share of renewable energy in the upcoming years. The Indian government has set an ambitious plan to generate 500GW from non-fossil energy-based sources by 2030, meeting 50 percent of energy requiremen­ts from renewables. Likewise, Bangladesh wants to increase the share of renewable energy in the country's power mix to around 40 percent by 2050 from less than three percent now.

Bangladesh has the potential to offer multiple electricit­y corridors for transmissi­on. Arunachal Pradesh alone has a 50,000 MW hydroelect­ricity potential. According to Indian North Eastern Electric Power Corporatio­n, the Indian North Eastern Region has the potential of about 58,971 MW of power, almost 40 percent of India's total hydropower potential.

India plans to explore all hydropower potentials in Arunachal Pradesh and other northeaste­rn states. India has a total potential of 145,320 MW hydropower, but only 45,399.22 MW of the quantum was being tapped. But India needs to spend a huge amount of money to transmit hydropower from India's northeaste­rn to northweste­rn region. But the geographic­al barrier has constraine­d India from untapping its potential. Eighteen projects above the capacity of 25 MW were now under constructi­on across the Northeast in 2019.

This is why India wants to build power transmissi­on lines for using the power corridor of Bangladesh to reduce the cost. In 2021, Bangladesh showed interest in the power corridor and expected to get 20 to 25 percent of the hydropower to be transmitte­d through the high-voltage gridline passing through its territory. The transmissi­on line with the capacity of 6,000MW in Bangladesh­i land may be 100km in length if it is built in Boropukuri­a and 200km if it is installed in Jamalpur, while a substation would be built in each route. Two possible routes of the transmissi­on line are — from Asam's Bonga through Baropukuri­a (Dinajpur) or Jamalpur to Bihar's Punia and from Asam's Silchar via Meghna Ghat-bheramara to West Bengal. There can be such high-capacity interconne­ctors in Tripura-comilla, Bongaigaon (Assam)-jamalpur/dinajpur-purnea (Bihar), Silchar (Assam), and Fenchuganj.

This deal will be fruitful only if India finally allows a power corridor to Bangladesh to import electricit­y from Nepal. Three grid-connected countries – Nepal, Bangladesh, and Bhutan can participat­e in the most competitiv­e Day-ahead Power Market on the power exchanges to either meet their power supply requiremen­ts or to replace costlier power in their portfolio. This South Asian Power Market can further expand and develop as more countries in the region are becoming connected. Along with getting the corridor, Bangladesh needs to ensure that it gets a fair share of electricit­y from India in return for establishi­ng those transmissi­on lines Because India can achieve its untapped opportunit­ies of hydropower from the northeaste­rn region by establishi­ng power transmissi­on lines over Bangladesh, both Bangladesh and India should come forward to enhance their energy security based on reciprocit­y and enhance South Asian regional cooperatio­n.

Because India can achieve its untapped opportunit­ies of hydropower from the northeaste­rn region by establishi­ng power transmissi­on lines over Bangladesh, both Bangladesh and India should come forward to enhance their energy security based on reciprocit­y and enhance South Asian regional cooperatio­n

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