Addressing a rally here to canvas votes for her party nominees for the May 16 assembly polls, she said although private players had the capability to produce adequate electricity, power cuts still persisted in many states as government power generation corporations were making loss.
As a result they could neither repay bank loans nor could purchase power even as private firms were also unable to repay debts as they could not function in full steam, she said in her first election rally outside Chennai after launching the campaign on Saturday last.
"That is why, this scheme will be beneficial to private firms and banks, but will only affect Tamil Nadu government and its people," she said.
The Chief Minister was responding to criticism by Union Ministers for Power and Environment, Piyush Goyal and Prakash Javadekar, respectively, for not adopting Ujjwal Discom Assurance Yojana (UDAY).
Her arch rival Karunanidhi had also sought her response on the matter.
"As a result no development schemes can be implemented. Therefore, I had stated that the FRBM relaxation including repayment should be extended to 15 years, and that Centre should subsidise a part of the debt burden of discoms accepted by the state government," she said.
Further, quarterly revision of power tariff under UDAY was "unacceptable," she said.
Javadekar had said there was loss due to lack of power meters, she said adding, that it was wrong to say there was pilferage since only agricultural pump sets and huts lacked meters.
"Karunanidhi is well aware that his party is not going to
win the elections. That is why he demands for accepting a scheme that proposes quarterly power tariff revision," Jayalalithaa said.
On Goyal's "Jayalalithaa is inaccessible" remark, seconded by his cabinet colleagues Javadekar and Pon Radhakrishnan, she referred to her Finance Minister O Panneerselvam detailing out, datewise, her meetings with various Central Ministers, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
On Javadekar's contention that only Tamil Nadu was yet to respond on the Kasturirangan report on Western Ghats, she said her colleague and Electricity Minister Natham R Viswanathan had made it clear that many of the recommendations were "against" the people living there and that the state had sought time till May to make its submission.
Reiterating her assurance for staggered implementation of prohibition, she trained her guns on Karunanidhi, saying he lacked the locus standi to talk about the issue as he had relaxed the dry law in 1971.
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