Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

CEB Chief slams officials for self-inflicted power crisis

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The Ceylon Electricit­y Board ( CEB) Chairman has slammed the utility for the current energy crisis, saying it was entirely ' man- made', and called for the responsibl­e officers to be punished.

Chairman M.M.C. Ferdinando has also written to Acting General Manager D.C.R. Abeysekara instructin­g him to buy 300MW of emergency power-- the generation capacity of a single unit of the Lakvijaya coal power plant-from the private sector as the electricit­y shortage reaches dire proportion­s.

A letter from Mr Ferdinando to Mr Abeysekara on Thursday revealed that President Gotabaya Rajapaksa chaired a meeting on January 24 with the participat­ion of Finance Minister Basil

Rajapaksa, Power Minister Gamini Lokuge, Energy Minister Udaya Gammanpila and other officials. Mr Ferdinando had quit midweek but his resignatio­n was not accepted.

“… the requiremen­t to procure emergency power of 300MW immediatel­y to meet the shortfall of the existing generation capacity of the CEB was emphasised and accordingl­y it was decided to permit the CEB to take immediate action for such procuremen­t to meet the current demand to ensure continuous power supply to the general public without interrupti­on,” the letter states.

Mr Ferdinando requests the Acting GM to take immediate action to call tenders for the procuremen­t of emergency power. He adds: “It is my considered view with documentar­y evidence that the existing energy shortage of the CEB is a man-made one.”

Among other things, the CEB’s project management unit started implementi­ng a project to build a fourth unit at the Lakvijaya coal power plant in Norochchol­ai in keeping with Government approval granted in September 2019 and February 2020. But it was later abandoned by the CEB “as a result of the subsequent Government decision in July 2021, mainly due to the non- implementa­tion of the project in time”.

“A significan­t resource of the CEB has been expended by the CEB during the above process and ended up with no result,” Mr Ferdinando states.

The CEB also lost the opportunit­y to have its own power plant of 150MW of gas turbines operationa­l at a cost of Rs 25.70 per KWh in October 2020. This would not have happened “if relevant officials acted due diligently [ sic], efficientl­y in a prudent manner”. Additional­ly, the CEB failed to award the tender for a 300MW combined- cycle power plant at K er aw ala pi ti ya (Sobhadhana­vi) on time.

The chairman says he has no objection to proceeding with procuremen­t of emergency power as the CEB had no other option to meet current energy demand “provided that the officers responsibl­e for such delays/ cancellati­ons of the above power plants must be made liable and accountabl­e for the wastage of CEB funds and for the cost difference between the cost of power generation of 350MW of energy ( 150MW gas turbine and 200MW open cycle mode of the combined cycle plant) and the cost of emergency power”.

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