A plant load factor (PLF) is a measure of average capacity utilisation. In the electricity industry, load factor is a measure of the output of a power plant compared to the maximum output it could produce.
"The average PLF for thermal power stations on an all-India basis has remained subdued at 59.3 per cent during 5M FY2017 as against 62.3 per cent in FY2016, due to factors like paying capacity constraints of state-owned distribution utilities, higher generation from the hydro and renewable segment and a sizeable increase in thermal power generation capacity over the last 16 months," ICRA said in a statement.
"We expect average all-India thermal PLF levels to show some improvement...In the near term; although still at subdued levels," ICRA Ratings Senior Vice President Sabyasachi Majumdar said.
"This will be driven by off-take from the discoms, which are likely to benefit with de-leveraging and refinancing of debt on their books under UDAY, policy measures such as flexible utilisation of coal linkages and the e-auction framework for short-term power procurement and improved domestic coal availability," Majumdar added.
In turn, utilities are increasingly showing a preference for tie-up of short/medium term PPAs. This is an area of concern for IPP capacity which is awaiting long-term PPA tie-up, especially given the subdued level of short-term traded price level --varying between Rs 2.5-3.5 kwh), both on the reverse auction platform and the power exchange.
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