Thirty-one power stations with a combined capacity of 14,305 megawatt, which are languishing for want of gas, can bid support from the Power System Development Fund (PSDF) for generating 30 per cent of their installed capacity, called plant load factor or efficiency, with imported liquefied natural gas (LNG).
Power companies seeking the lowest support from PSDF, after considering an electricity tariff of Rs 5.50 per unit, will get the first right over LNG, whose delivered price too will be slightly reduced by asking importer and transporter to take a hair-cut in marketing and operational cost, Power Secretary P K Sinha said today.
While private power stations will bid for the financial support, the actual money from PSDF, which collects fines from states for grid indiscipline, will go to the distribution company.
The PSDF kitty has accumulated Rs 9,500 crore as of now.
To make the imported fuel affordable, the Union government has also decided to waive service tax while the importer will take a 50 per cent cut in the cost of converting the liquid gas (LNG) into its gaseous state, Sinha said
Besides helping generate 79 billion units of electricity, valued at about Rs 42,000 crore, the arrangement would help the stranded assets repay debt but promoters will have to forego return on equity, he said.
At present, out of the 24,150 MW of gas-based power plants, 14,305 MW capacity of projects are stranded because of limited availability of domestically produced natural gas imported LNG is costly.
Sinha said there will be no change in allocations of domestic gas. State-owned gas utility GAIL India has been tasked to import LNG for power plants outside Gujarat, where GSPC will import the fuel to revive power plants.
