Two swallows...

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| It would be a mistake, though, to judge the future of India's power sector on the basis of these two bids. For one, the government has allotted the land, given captive mines and created special conditions for these projects, including working on making payment security more stringent""the generators are to be allowed freedom to sell to third parties if the state electricity boards are unable to make payments (i.e. the 'open access' that everyone has been clamouring for, is being offered to these projects). Since these terms are not being offered on all projects, it is likely that the others will be priced higher, to neutralise the greater risk and higher costs. Second, since the electricity boards are meeting their payment obligations today, they should be able to provide a payment guarantee to these two projects, and financial closure may not therefore be a problem. But this ability is a direct fallout of the securitisation package for the boards""if they continue to under-recover on new electricity supplies, however, they will start defaulting sooner or later, and that will mean the bankability of projects based on sales to them will suffer. Indeed, as the installed capacity in the country rose from 69,065 MW in 1991-92 to 112,682 MW in 2003-04, commercial losses of the boards rose from Rs 4,117 crore to Rs 20,379 crore (and further to Rs 22,013 crore last year). Given this, it is by no means certain that financiers will back more than a handful of mega or other power projects. In other words, there is no getting away from the old fashioned solutions of reducing theft and subsidies in the sector, and creating transmission corridors to wheel power in and out of deficit and surplus regions. |
First Published: Dec 20 2006 | 12:00 AM IST