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Re-modeling our DISCOMs

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April 24, 2018

What is the issue?

  • Disruptions in technology, regulations, and business models are forcing power distribution companies (DISCOMs) to take stock of their future.
  • DISCOMs need to get innovative and redesign their tariff structure and business model to tide over this impasse. 

What are the problems in plaguing the Indian DISCOMs?

  • Indian DISCOMs are financially strained - at the end of FY16, total outstanding debt was Rs 4,146 billion and annual losses were Rs 657 billion.
  • There are significant challenges in the sector that demonstrate how short-term measures will not suffice to hold off the long-term collapse.
  • Purchase agreements - 75-80% of a DISCOM’s costs are in power purchase and many are locked into expensive agreements (PPAs) for decades.
  • Improper planning, and technical constraints in operating the grid, has been costing as much as Rs 200 billion annually.
  • Cross Subsidisation - DISCOMs charge “commercial and industrial (C&I) consumers” very high tariffs.
  • This is to compensate for subsidies provided to residential and agricultural consumers, for whom tariffs are kept artificially low for political reasons.   
  • High tariffs combined with unreliable supply have rendered Indian industry uncompetitive in global markets.
  • To counter this, industries were forced to build capacity for captive electricity generation – which accounted for as much as 17% of all DISCOM sales in Fy17. 
  • Notably, C&I consumers currently have new options for distributed generation of renewable energy - like installing solar systems in their premises.
  • Hence, by charging exorbitant tariffs and providing unreliable power supply, DISCOMs will eventually drive away their best paying consumers.
  • Government Initiatives - “Power for All, Make in India, and speedy deployment of renewable energy” are further complicating the sector’s woes.
  • There is a need for DISCOMs to rethink their business models and reorient towards a more sustainable future.

What is the way ahead?

  • C&I Consumers - Make in India, as conceived, has a focus on high value-add sectors such as electronics and ICT, aerospace, and defence manufacturing.
  • Additionally, a vast majority of the MSMEs (which are mass employers) too are dependent on electricity for their production processes.
  • Considering India’s growth rate, there is hence a need for higher electricity-intensity and improved reliability for units.
  • A rationalised tariff structure would help to retain existing consumers and draw in new market entrants for DISCOMs.
  • Power for All - This is dependent on many factors that range from engineering and execution challenges like:
  • Electrifying 3.3 million household per month.
  • Ensuring that reliable and regular power is supplied
  • Metering and billing the consumption effectively.
  • For DISCOMs, addition of these new consumers will saddled with more financial burden due to the subsidies that they’ll have to be provided. 
  • Agricultural and residential consumers together account for 50% of the sales volume but only 30% of the revenue.
  • But there are indications that a considerable chunk of the rural masses are willing to pay higher for unintrupted and quality power supply.
  • To cater to this aspiring group of consumers, DISCOMs have to reduce power procurement costs and upgrade their infrastructure.  
  • Renewables - New renewable energy projects offer hopes for reducing costs and increasing revenue for DISCOMs.
  • Renewable energy is also important for India’s battle against climate change, and the full potential of this domain needs to be exploited.
  • Private roof-top installations have started producing significant amounts of power lately, but DISCOMs are largely seeing this trend negatively.
  • DISCOMs see individual generators are predating their revenues, which needs to change by co-opting them with a more positive approach. 
  • Notably, these private generators produce and consume at the same time and are charged based on a two-way metering which indicats net power intake.  

 

Source: Business Stanadard

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