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Senate panel wants Rs400bn injected into power sector

Kabira

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ISLAMABAD: With power sector defaults exceeding Rs824 billion, a Senate committee led by the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) members has urged the government to inject up to Rs400bn into the system to avoid closure of power plants and ease the problem of circular debt that now stands at about Rs1.55 trillion.

The Special Senate Committee on Circular Debt led by PTI’s Shibli Faraz has mentioned these short-term measures in its report about steps that could be taken to deal with the crisis. The committee stands dissolved after submitting its final report about resolution of the circular debt issue.

The report has proposed drastic measures, including a review of the fuel supply agreements of the power projects based on Regasified Liquefied Natural Gas (RLNG), to bring them on a normal plane instead of their “must pay status” under which they must be compensated even if they do not produce electricity.

Report suggests measures to deal with circular debt

According to the report, the role of two key regulators — the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority and National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (Nepra) — should also be reviewed and they should be merged if needed.

Some of its suggestions are already known, like reducing reliance on imported fuels and increasing local resources like hydropower and other renewable sources because 63 per cent of the electricity is being produced from fossil fuels and 55pc from imported ones.

The committee has recommended privatisation of power companies, private sector participation in electricity supply operations and handing over of distribution companies to the provincial governments with recovery shortfalls settled from the NFC award.

It recommended that enforcement of the renewable energy policy 2006 be extended for two years because a sudden break in December 2017 had blocked investments in the sector.

The committee also called for reversing some of the amendments made to the Nepra Act by the PML-N government in its last few months in office because they had “compromised the independence and professional standing of the regulator by reducing the status of its four members and the chairman to a rubber stamp.

The report noted that it was simply impossible for a business to be profitable when about 25pc of its production was going to waste — known in the power sector as aggregate technical and commercial losses.

It explained that the system (transmission and distribution) losses in the power sector officially stood at 18.3pc and another 8-10pc of the billed amount remained unrecovered, resulting in a Rs295bn gap that is to be re-charged to the consumer or picked up by the government and funded through taxpayers’ money. Ironically, a major part of Rs175bn is re-charged or re-circulated to the consumers in monthly bills and around Rs120bn annually remains stuck with the government and transformed into circular debt.

The report said the total circular debt or funding gap amounted to Rs1.557 trillion in the fiscal year ending in June 2018. This included Rs245bn receivables from the government and related entities, Rs500bn running defaults and disconnections, Rs187bn system losses of five years, R338bn tariff delays and another Rs300bn as tax refunds and instalments of bills.

The committee regretted that even though such a major issue was challenging the fundamentals of the country’s economy there was neither an effort at consolidation of power sector entities nor reconciliation of the balances available on their financial statements.

So much so that even the principal loan amounts reported by the Discos, Central Power Purchasing Agency, Power Holding Company and the power division do not match. On top of that there is no consolidated financial model in place that could project the financial position, performance and results of the sector based on key assumptions such as price sensitivities, changes in prices of imported fuels and currency devaluation.

The Senate committee deplored that 8,000MW of capacity addition in recent years was based on RLNG alone, having currency and oil market sensitivities. The report advised the government to settle an outstanding tariff confusion of the Azad Kashmir government which was getting a fixed rate under the Mangla Dam agreement and resulting in a Rs100bn gap.

The report criticised the previous governments for a system under which the Federal Board of Revenue charged taxes on total billing of the distribution companies even through a significant part was never paid by the consumers. About Rs100bn was stuck on this count alone, limiting the cash flows of distribution networks.

It was ironic that cumulative receivables as of June 2018 surged to Rs824.3bn, up from Rs670bn a year before, said the report. There were more than 5.3 million non-paying electricity connections and 1.3 million disconnected ones, having Rs405bn and Rs95bn outstanding against them.

The committee concluded that the government should inject at least Rs300bn into the sector to avoid plant closures. The money could be raised through commercial loans with repayments in five years and involvement of provincial interior ministers in operations of the distribution companies to increase recoveries and reduce losses and theft.

It said there should be task forces of law enforcement personnel at the provincial level for making recoveries. Any shortfall in recoveries or theft should be linked to a financial adjustment formula between the federal and provincial governments through the national pool to ensure delivery on targets.

Published in Dawn, October 8th, 2018
https://www.dawn.com/news/1437596/senate-panel-wants-rs400bn-injected-into-power-sector
 
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I think we have enough power we need to improve the transmission lines and meter system across cities

The card based electricity supply makes sense

Load up access to grid with your electricity card and pay as you go meter

These wires above ground need to go
kunda.jpg



Need to modernize these area
electrical-transformer-work-500x500.jpg
 
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I think we have enough power we need to improve the transmission lines and meter system across cities
The card based electricity supply makes sense
Load up access to grid with your electricity card and pay as you go meter
It will help but problem will remain.
1> Corruption theft give money to line man.
2> Corruption with in selling Equipment
3> And most important cost of production is higher then price
e.g. Wind Farm are charging Rs 11~12 or little more
Grid is under NTDC(Wapda) cost?
Main Transmission line NTDC(WAPDA) cost?
Distribution company e.g.(LESCO, KESCO, MESCO) cost?

One important point which everyone forget is massive canal system in Pakistan specially Punjab.
How much we can generator power from it not small one but big one which are directly derived from Rivers.
Load is also near so cost will reduced + using multiple points for power generation which is possible due to canal length.
 
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@ziaulislam what is your opinion on this report presented by PTI team? This is big news but ignored on PDF. We are busy at useless topics.
 
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One important point which everyone forget is massive canal system in Pakistan specially Punjab.
How much we can generator power from it not small one but big one which are directly derived from Rivers.
Load is also near so cost will reduced + using multiple points for power generation which is possible due to canal length.
This is already in progress. There are various Canals which are getting small power generation units. Some are already generating power. Furthermore this can only be done on large canals.
On topic: The shortfall in power generation/ distribution will remain for the foreseeable future. It is pointless to keep injecting money into the sector when no substantial steps are taken to reform and eliminate the cause of the problems.
 
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This is already in progress. There are various Canals which are getting small power generation units. Some are already generating power. Furthermore this can only be done on large canals.
On topic: The shortfall in power generation/ distribution will remain for the foreseeable future. It is pointless to keep injecting money into the sector when no substantial steps are taken to reform and eliminate the cause of the problems.
Can you highlight list of project or site identified on canals? How much total MW can be generated from Main Canals? i highly doubt that any study was made to estimate total power generation capacity.
Its the only quickest solution possible at the moment. DAMS are a decade games which also should be started immediately on War Footing Bases.
 
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Can you highlight list of project or site identified on canals? How much total MW can be generated from Main Canals? i highly doubt that any study was made to estimate total power generation capacity.
I don't have details to hand but a quick google search give this article: https://www.dawn.com/news/967591
I know one of the project is already in operation.
 
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I don't have details to hand but a quick google search give this article: https://www.dawn.com/news/967591
I know one of the project is already in operation.
Sir this is what your link says
NEWS DATED November 15, 2010
Punjab's canal falls, barrages and rivers have a potential of generating about 6,000 MW for which 330 suitable sites have been identified and eight medium and small hydropower stations are in operation since long.
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There are another 248 raw sites for which feasibility studies have yet to be undertaken.

Now out of 6000 MW how much we have achieved till yet?

Second whats the unit cost because its public / private or when this project be handed over to Govt.?
 
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Now out of 6000 MW how much we have achieved till yet?
Again I haven't looked into the figures but these small projects are being constructed.

"The hydropower projects, each ranging from 7.64 to 2.82 MW capacity, are to be located on various irrigation canals. Marala project of 7.64 MW capacity is to be located in district Sialkot and Chianwali (5.38 MW capacity) in district Gujranwala, both on the Upper Chenab Canal.

Okara hydropower of 4.16 MW capacity will be installed on Lower Bari Doab Canal in district Okara, whereas Deg-out Fall project of 4.04 MW is being constructed on Upper Chenab Canal in district Sheikhupura, and a hydropower of 2.82 MW on Pakpattan Canal. These hydropower stations, for which detailed feasibility studies were carried out in the recent past, will be interconnected with national grid for sale of power in bulk to the Wapda/NTDC system"

The above mentioned projects. I know personally one is in operation (built during the last couple of years). I don't know the details of the unit price or the total utilised capacity out of 6000MW. You need to understand one cannot utilise all the potential as economics are more important when it comes to investment (be it by the Government or Private sector). On Large Canals the Falls are every 10 miles (I think). So one cannot build a power house every 10 miles... Go on google earth and each of those projects will be seen...
 
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So much so that even the principal loan amounts reported by the Discos, Central Power Purchasing Agency, Power Holding Company and the power division do not match. On top of that there is no consolidated financial model in place that could project the financial position, performance and results of the sector based on key assumptions such as price sensitivities, changes in prices of imported fuels and currency devaluation.

Summary: Classic definition of S.N.A.F.U.
 
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@ziaulislam what is your opinion on this report presented by PTI team? This is big news but ignored on PDF. We are busy at useless topics.
Well remeber we were talkig about coal vs LNG and i said LNG was a second best decision as oil is not going to get expensive ..well who knew trump will come ...so LNG plants are going to sit their with problem in affording the fuel، it was 7 rs when oil was 45 woild be 12 cents now when its 80s....why did PMLN reneegade on coal ..well they waited 2 years for investment and than relaized it was late already

This is going to big headache for new govt..if it just arrests the circular debt and park thw current debt in power holding company than this would be a miracle ...and alone would be the biggest reform in Pakistan history

Well govt has to push for cheaper hydro in long run and in short run make electricity expensive and improve collection ..
Once dasu, tarbela and smallee hydro comes online we might be able to controlling this problem...and pray oil prices drop.
 
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PESCO ,Peshawar electric company has line losses of 55% i.e 45-50 billion Rs instead of making recovery and doing dharnas during last tenure PTI should recover 45X5= 250 Billion from PESCO first
What are the line losses in Lahore after 30 year rule of ghasti ke bachay Sharifs?
 
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What are the line losses in Lahore after 30 year Sharif rule?
Google it ,Now Govt can clearly take action against them instead of increasing tariff for ordinary people to recover losses
 
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Google it ,Now Govt can clearly take action against them instead of increasing tariff for ordinary people to recover losses
No you answer my question.... you seem to be happy with the 30 year rule of Sharifs and are longing for them to return. What are the line losses in Lahore?
 
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