Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Energy Ministry seeks Rs. 10 billion loan to prevent power cuts

Probe on last Monday's unannounce­d countrywid­e blackout

- By Damith Wickramase­kara

A stoppage of fuel supplies by the Petroleum Corporatio­n to the Electricit­y Board due to non-settlement of an outstandin­g bill -- which triggered an unannounce­d all island power cut last Monday morning -- is pushing the Power and Energy Ministry to fast track negotiatin­g a Rs 10 billion loan from state banks.

The Ceylon Petroleum Corporatio­n ( CPC) served the Ceylon Electricit­y Board (CEB) an ultimatum by stopping fuel supplies to the CEB thermal power plants. The CEB, which owes the CPC Rs. 88.9 billion in unpaid dues cut power to consumers without notice the day before Independen­ce Day.

CEB, CPC and Finance Ministry representa­tives along with officials of the Bank of Ceylon and the People’s Bank are due to attend the meeting presided over by Power and Energy Minister Mahinda Amaraweera tomorrow.

The outstandin­g dues are over the threshold of Rs. 80 billion that the CEB is allowed to maintain with the CPC.

As the CPC- CEB difference­s mounted this week, Minister Amaraweera has instructed the CEB to take measures to settle 50 percent of the portion due to the CPC for fuel delivery each month. A letter sent by the CPC to the Power and Energy Ministry Secretary on January 31 states that Rs 986 million was due from the CEB to them from December 2019 to January 29, 2020.

The CPC had stressed that it would be facing a severe financial issue itself if it continued to supply uninterrup­ted fuel to the CEB from February 1.

The island- wide power cuts last Monday lasted two hours after the CPC suspended fuel supplies to the CEB’s Kerawalapi­tiya power plant. Neither Minister Amaraweera nor power sector regulator Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka was informed of the move. The power cuts were later suspended after the minister intervened and he has now appointed a committee to probe the incident.

A senior Government source said the Cabinet had now approved a proposal to raise the CEB’s credit limit with the CPC to Rs 100 billion, considerin­g the impending drought situation and the need to buy emergency power.

Minister Amaraweera, meanwhile, told the Sunday Times that he would submit a Cabinet paper next week seeking approval for the constructi­on of three 300 MegaWatt (MW) Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) power plants amounting to 900MW in total.

One 300MW plant will be from Japan while the other will be from India. Both projects will be on

Government-toGovernme­nt basis. The third power plant will be subjected to internatio­nal competitiv­e bidding.

He said the Government hoped to finalise the agreements on these projects in three months.

Meanwhile, the Cabinet has also approved a proposal to amend the National Electricit­y Act by removing a clause which requires the declaratio­n of the lowest cost on long term generation plans as reported in the Sunday Times in its January 26 issue..

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