Chhattisgarh has most distressed power plants

December 25, 2017 08:04 pm | Updated December 26, 2017 01:06 am IST

 Of the projects under stress, only 10% are in the transmission and distribution sector.

Of the projects under stress, only 10% are in the transmission and distribution sector.

New Delhi: Almost a third of the distressed power plants unable to repay loans worth crores are in Chhattisgarh, according to data from the Ministry of Power.

Last week, the ministry submitted a list 34 such projects to a parliamentary panel on energy, 10 of which are in the BJP-ruled Chhattisgarh, the highest in any state.

The panel had posed a detailed questionnaire to the Union ministries of Power, Coal, Finance, as well as to the Reserve Bank of India, the concerned banks, and the developers. While many of the questions were answered, the government continued to refuse to reveal the exact amount of liability that these power projects owe to the banks.

Further, in its reply, the government has all but shrugged off the responsibility of the high levels of non-performing assets (NPA) in the power sector. “The decision to set up a power plant is taken by concerned developer based on his own assessment,” the government has said in its reply. “The developer has to arrange all inputs like land, water, necessary clearances, sale of power under the power purchase agreement.”

It further claimed: “In case of power sector, over projection of demand of electricity accompanied with the aggressive bidding decision were made by the developers and hence some of them are running in profit and a few are in loss.”

The government was also vociferous in blaming the bidders of such projects, saying that they should have known about the costs and efficiencies prior to bidding and quoting the low tariffs that they did.

“It is expected that bidders would estimate their costs and efficiencies and will act rationally while quoting tariffs so as to have a fair competition,” the government said in one of its replies. “However, some of the bidders might have bid irrationally or overestimated their efficiencies or under estimated their costs and might have quoted lower tariff.”

In rupee terms, the government’s data shows that the gross loans and advances given to the power sector as of June 2017 amounted to ₹5.59 lakh crore, of which ₹37,941 crore was classified as gross non-performing asset (GNPA). Within the GNPA, over 90% are from the electricity generation segment, while the rest are from transmission and distribution.

The government itself accepted that one of the top reasons for financial stress in the thermal power project is the unavailability of fuel arising due to the cancellation of coal blocks.

However, it also reiterated the sanctity of the power purchase agreements (PPA), saying that they must be honoured regardless of the extraneous situations.

“It has been observed that the contracting parties are obliged to adhere [to] the terms and conditions of the PPA even if it becomes onerous to one of the parties to perform the contract due to change in market or other parameters subsequent to the signing of the PPA if such change is not covered by the provisions of the PPA,” the government said.

The developers, however, beg to differ. In their answers they have almost uniformly stated that the delay in the projects is due to reasons beyond their control. In its reply, IDFC Bank, which has financed R.K. Powergen in Chhattisgarh, states that though the plant was initially to be set up in Tamil Nadu, it was shifted to Chhattisgarh instead on the ministry’s recommendation.

The company signed an MoU with the Chhattisgarh government in 2005. The company was allotted a coal block in 2008. This allocation was later cancelled by the Supreme Court. The Chhattisgarh government also refused to honour the PPA. “The government has been resorting to coercive measures pressuring the company to cancel the PPA,” IDFC Bank further said in its reply.

To a question from the parliamentary panel on whether these assets can be taken over and made operational with government intervention, the Power Ministry said: “Generally, the government would like to act as a facilitator by taking requisite steps to address the systemic issues relating to stress.”

The Power Ministry claims that SHAKTI, or Scheme for Harnessing and Allocating Koyla (Coal) Transparently in India, which was launched in May this year, will provide “substantial relief” for six of the 34 projects.

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