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Towards Quality Electricity Supply

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March 27, 2019

What is the issue?

  • Latest reports reveal that only around 20,000 households in Chhattisgarh remained to be given electricity connection in the country.
  • The connection challenge may have been met, but the supply challenge remains, which has to be addressed.

What is the drawback in approach?

  • To improve the quality of life and to aid economic activities, it is essential to ensure affordable and reliable electricity supply.
  • But this has largely been neglected in the rush to reach household connection and village electrification milestones.
  • Supply is managed by cash-strapped distribution companies which have no financial incentive to supply to the rural poor.

What are the concerns?

  • Supply quality - As the focus has been on connections, there is limited data on problems with electricity supply quality.
  • Available data indicate that metering, billing and payment complaints dominate the list.
  • There are inordinate delays in issuing bills for newly connected households, mistakes in bills, meter faults and difficulties in bill payments.
  • Delays or mistakes in bills lead to very high bills, which small consumers find tough to pay, thus leading to disconnection.
  • Power outages - Government reports indicate 16 to 24 hours of supply in rural areas.
  • But consumer surveys and sample measurements report much lower hours.
  • Community services - Other than homes, rural electrification should also ensure access to agriculture, small business and community services like street lighting, schools, and health centres.
  • Agriculture gets only 7 to 8 hours of supply in most States, mostly during the night, with frequent interruptions.
  • Frequent interruptions also discourage operation of commercial enterprises in rural areas.
  • But revenue of the distribution company can increase only if more such consumers use electricity.

What are the possible measures?

  • Before the consumers lose faith in the grid supply, it is necessary to take steps to improve the quality of supply.
  • Post connection parameters like issue of first bill, hours of supply, distribution transformer failure rate and growth of non-domestic consumer connections should be tracked.
  • State discoms could improve metering and billing and deploy bill payment centres with support from panchayat offices, post offices or health centres.
  • Complaint procedures can be simplified through mobile applications and public hearings.
  • Distribution companies should be financially penalised by the regulatory commissions for poor quality of supply.
  • The Integrated Power Development Scheme (IPDS), which is presently urban focussed, should be extended to rural areas.
  • Power from stranded generation capacity, depreciated plants and unutilised capacity should be rationalised.
  • It can be provided at concessional rates to distribution companies for reliable supply in designated rural areas.
  • To promote economic activity, small enterprises with consumption of about 300 units should be assured affordable tariff.
  • For community facilities like health centres in want of reliable supply, schemes to deploy kilowatt size solar plants with battery backup could be planned.
  • Technology-led initiatives like prepaid meters, smart meters and direct benefit transfer should be attempted as pilot projects before scaling up.

 

Source: BusinessLine

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