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More power for power
Country needs additional capacity on all fronts
Business Standard / New Delhi October 29, 2009, 0:15 IST

The Eleventh Five Year Plan promised “power for all” by 2012, with an additional capacity of 100,000Mw being generated. While more political power has come the way of the ruling party, its promise to deliver electric power to the people remains far from being fulfilled. No one disagrees with the lament that performance on the power generation front has been one of the most important failures of the United Progressive Alliance government. Even Congress spokespersons routinely admit this on television talk shows. To be fair, it is not just the Congress and its ministers who are to blame. Few state governments, and most of them are run by non-Congress parties, have a good track record. Together, governments at the Centre and in the states have an abysmal record of capacity creation and utilisation in the power sector. But failure of leadership at the top is manifest and waiting to be addressed. The numbers tell it all. According to data released by the Central Electricity Authority, capacity addition in power generation continues to fall woefully short of target. In the period April-September 2009, total capacity addition in electricity generation was 4,433Mw against a target of 6,462Mw, amounting to about 31 per cent shortfall. This comes on top of years of under-performance. In 2008-09, under-achievement of target was as high as 66 per cent, and in 2007-08, it was a shockingly high 74 per cent. Any student with marks like these would be failed. The time is long past when whips ought to have been cracked. Today’s poor performance is a reflection of yesterday’s inactivity.

The silver lining on the power front is, of course, the fact that several new private sector ultra-mega power projects are scheduled to come on stream and power generation is expected to improve in coming months. Ensuring this ought to be the number one priority for the government on the infrastructure front. More shocking than the poor performance in capacity addition in thermal power generation, where achievement is 72 per cent of target, is the abysmal performance in nuclear power generation. Against a target of 220Mwe for April-September 2009, actual capacity addition is nil! This figure stands out in contrast to the Department of Atomic Energy’s (DAE’s) stated aim of generating 20,000Mwe of nuclear energy by 2020! A variety of factors may have been responsible for this poor performance, but the DAE and the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd must take a fair share of the blame for not anticipating some of these problems. The time has come for the government to open up nuclear power generation to private sector investment. Necessary changes must be made in existing law to enable private investment in nuclear power. Even the prime minister’s Economic Advisory Council has urged this. A required legislation on nuclear liability is waiting to be introduced in Parliament so that private investment can come into the sector. Hopefully, the government will use the winter session of Parliament to get this legislation through.

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M.A.Pai
Increasing power generation is one part of the equation but delivery of that is more important.It is here that we fail consistently . Looking at the stats in www.cea.nic.in there is a consistent gap between power demand and power met ( about 13,000MW). It is this area of delivery that needs attention. The country must make use of the resources of its power engineers by putting the power area on a mission mode as Telecom was in the 80's. pai www.indusscitech.net
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rsingh.sidhu
there is no scarcity of power in our country the is to control wastage of it.you see when electricity come in summer in cities booster pumps\tullu pumps switched on immediately by the peoples resulting in overloading of transfarmers so if nagar council mcd supply water regularily to peoples and they must ban this menance and impose huge penality in thousand rupees keeping in view the area of building then by doing this we can rid of power cuts they should also switched off street lights at 11pm and govt.also should stop free supply to farmers because they misuse it by using bigger motors instead of sanctioned small motors,there should also be complete ban on submersible motors for domestic purpose
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