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March
26, 2000
It’s
time for consumers to pay up or to protest
For
Maharashtrians, the time to pay for the Enron power and other inefficiencies
of the state power utility is here. The nearly bankrupt state can no
longer avoid the inevitable and the Maharashtra State Electricity Board
(MSEB) has proposed a hefty 20 per cent average hike in power tariffs
to raise Rs 1,219 crores. Since the costs can no longer be loaded on
to already burdened industrial consumers, the MSEB has for the first
time proposed a reduction in industrial tariff and an increase in agricultural
tariff.
This is a positive development, because industry would otherwise have
moved out of Maharashtra. Already the projected industrial growth and
consequent demand for power has failed to materialise. Charging agricultural
consumers is also a positive development, but it will require the MSEB
to first put in place a credible system of metering usage and collecting
revenues. However, the situation is bad news for the middle class domestic
consumers who will henceforth bear the burnt of price increases. For
instance, the present proposal wants domestic users to pay approximately
23 per cent more,and in the lowest consuming bracket of less that 50
units, accept a hike of over 60 per cent.
Maharashtra which boasts of the most expensive power project in the
country in Enrons Dabhol Power Corporation will be the first to
test whether consumers will continue to pay for the inefficiency of
the monopoly utilities and condone the large scale theft and inefficiency
which they cannot control.
In Gujarat, consumers supplied by the Ahmedabad Electric Supply Board,
are already agitating against proposed tariff hikes. They argue that
tariff hikes will have to be justified and utilities will have to prove
that they have negotiated the best possible deal with power producers
and done their best to reduce costs, cut transmission and distribution
losses and reduce theft. In Maharashtra, NGOs and user groups have already
lodged well researched objections to the tariff hike with the Maharashtra
Electric Regulatory Commission (MERC). The setting up of the MERC has
itself allowed NGOs and user groups to demand specific data from the
MSEB to verify its claims.
The first conclusion arising out of this is that MSEB has problems justifying
several hundred crores of rupees in costs. Secondly, the Pune based
Prayas, an energy research group, based on data submitted by the MSEB
has worked the effective cost per unit of power supplied
by Enron at a hefty Rs 5.95 a unit. It may be recalled that the Shiv
Sena-BJP government had repeatedly asserted that the cost of Enron power
would not be more than Rs three per unit. As against this, the Tata
Electric Supply companies supply power at Rs 1.80 per unit while the
National Thermal Power Corporation tariff is even less.
Thirdly, MSEBs submissions indicate that its unmetered consumption
has increased from 30 per cent to nearly 45 per cent of energy available
for sale. This would work out to a huge Rs 6,000 crore which is lumped
together as T&D losses and agricultural consumption. NGOs allege
that suppy to agricultural users is being deliberately inflated to hide
T&D losses.
The tariff hike raises several other questions as well. For instance,
if Phase I of Dabhol alone has made the state power surplus, what happens
when all the on-going projects go on stream? These include, Dabhol phase
II (1200 MW), Reliances Patalganga project (500 MW), the Mittals
Bhadravati project (1000 MW +1000 MW), the MSEBs own projects
at Khaparkheda and Koyna and the 495 MW Saphale project sanctioned to
the Bombay Suburban Electric Supply (BSES). Another 1000 MW of captive
power generation has also been cleared of which over half is already
in place.
So far, various political alignments which governed Maharashtra have
consistently fudged demand-supply data and exaggerated projected power
consumption. An independent study will provide a clear picture of real
demand and could be used to force the state to scrap unnecessary projects.
In fact, Maharashtras cost of power is so high, that even hugely
power deficit neighbours such as Karnataka, Andhra and Tamil Nadu are
unwilling to buy surplus power. Negotiations have also fallen through
because if the state exports power at a cost lower than that charged
to domestic users the MERC could open up its sweetheart deals such as
Enron.
Consumers should also demand that detailed data relating to power generation,
distribution, demand and supply should be compulsorily posted on the
internet so that researchers and NGOs can analyse it and disseminate
pertinent information. Such a practice has worked well in the USA. Finally
there is the question of industrial delinquency. Should the state not
be asked to explain how it continues to negotiate with the Mittals,
even after their sovereign counter-guarantee has lapsed and the groups
Dolvi plant owes MSEB nearly Rs 100 crores? There are several other
industrial consumers who are simply not paying up. What has MSEB done
to recover such dues and has it cut off power supply to them? All these
questions need answers before any power hike can be cleared by the MERC.
Updated
weekly.
The
author's e-mail address is: suchetadalal@yahoo.com
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columnists:
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