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Shahid Kardar: Power Sector Woes

ajpirzada

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Shahid Kardar
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The writer is a former governor of the State Bank of Pakistan.

A COMMON refrain in Pakistan today is that the role of the middle class and industry has been reduced to earning enough to pay their monthly electricity bills so that entities in the power sector can stay afloat. Pakistani industry is under severe stress because of the high administered prices of energy and fuel controlled by inefficient and corruption-ridden government-managed corporations.

While acknowledging that the major reasons for the high cost of electricity are delayed investments and the fuel mix with its heavy dependence on oil, the primary factors that have brought things to such a pass are policy, management and governance failures.

Other countries undertook electricity and power reforms essentially to reorient the sector in keeping with contemporary trends in technology and innovations (to improve efficiencies, especially of industry). In our case, power reforms are being led by the need to ease the burden of the weak financial condition of distribution companies, the goals being confined to narrow requirements of financial health.

Resultantly, our priorities are also skewed in terms of who is to be supplied electricity and at what price; this runs contrary to the economy’s needs to expand productive capacity and competitiveness, to create jobs for a rapidly growing labour force.

For example, close to 47pc of consumers in our case are domestic and barely 29pc are running industry compared to even India (by no means an example to follow) where the ratios are 25pc and 37pc respectively. Moreover, the rates in both India and Pakistan are much higher for industry than domestic consumers, in sharp contrast to policies in other countries and the interests of our domestic economies.

We have not even begun to tackle the problems in our defective power sector.
The financial losses of the sector were originally the result of low tariffs and high levels of subsidies, but now are largely the outcome of political interference. The latter has contributed to weak governance, poor maintenance of technologically backward equipment, rickety distribution systems, inadequate metering, non-merit appointments and overstaffing, larceny on a grand scale, poor collection of bills and literally no accountability. To top it all is an archaic financial structure characterised by no equity base and very high levels of debt requiring large interest payments.

Not only are the systems inefficient, theft — owing to collaborative/abetted corruption between customers and distribution company (DISCO) employees, and euphemistically classified as ‘technical losses’ at more than 24pc ( among the highest in the world) — is a bane. We have not even begun to tackle it. No country can afford robbery with such aplomb. It is also ridiculous to expect DISCOs to operate as commercial enterprises without any equity capital. Instead of equity, they only get loans from government/banks at high interest rates.

Moreover, it is also absurd to continue to subsidise an economic sector through the tariff structure instead of through the federal or provincial budgets. The latter approach will not only make the system transparent but also make the service providers more accountable.

All these issues are well known. But no one has the courage to tackle them, except by looking to the honest consumers to pay higher tariffs and on time to enable these utilities to cross-subsidise inefficiencies, pilferage and populist tariffs charged to farmers and low-consumption households.

Moreover, while capital follows the course of least resistance we are paying a heavy price for attracting investment on almost any terms, which is keeping electricity tariffs high. The guaranteed returns on equity are truly excessive, with resulting incomes also exempt from tax (except the withholding tax of 10pc on dividend payments from these earnings).

This guaranteed return is a lender and investor requirement because there is no market and trading for power. It was an error to invite private producers without allowing a market for trading and open access to transmission. Trading would have enabled the producer to charge what the market was able to pay/bear. This policy has repercussions for the overall price structure, industrial competitiveness, the demands on the country’s scarce foreign exchange resources and inflows and the future development of the sector.

In this context, it is particularly disturbing that agreements with the Chinese on power/coal-fired power projects are shrouded in secrecy. Nepra, the power regulator, has determined a rate of return of up to 27pc in dollar terms on such projects that would supposedly also apply to the Chinese investors. This rate is much higher than what is on offer anywhere in the world — the country’s poor image is a significant factor contributing to the lack of investors offering competitive tariffs.

Existing IPPs that were promised a rate of return of roughly 17.5pc actually earn more than double this amount (based on an examination of their financial statements). The resulting outflows of foreign exchange to those investing in power systems will become an unsustainable burden. For a product or service to be sold in local currency, it is a mistake to provide a guarantee against exchange rate fluctuations. The heavy outflows in foreign exchange to ‘service’ these investments/loans will encumber our external account, pressurising a renegotiation of these agreements.

It is the distribution end of the electricity supply chain where management and governance is at its worst. However, privatising these monopolies (DISCOs) would be a complex task without a highly competent regulator in the form of Nepra. Instead of promoting competition, the inadequately equipped Nepra merely functions as a calculator of tariffs. In the UK, there was incentive regulation in place to reduce costs and improve efficiency of operations. Nepra has adopted cost plus guaranteed return-based pricing, an approach discarded by the rest of the world ages ago. Part of the problem is that Nepra was set up with distribution of power as the sole responsibility of the public sector.

The managements of these agencies prefer a cosy relationship with the government so that the independent regulator does not demand improved performance. Even donors and the IMF, on whose insistence Nepra was established in the first place, do not themselves believe in the need for, and efficacy of, such institutions, since the conditonalities attached to their loans have built-in clauses for tariff revision that require Nepra to merely serve as a rubber-stamping authority.

The writer is a former governor of the State Bank of Pakistan.

Published in Dawn, November 25th , 2014

Power sector woes - Newspaper - DAWN.COM
 
excellent diagnosis! why all the focus on projects and more projects? Why no internal reform/accountability?

Let me give you guys a perspective:

1. Technical losses (corruption and internal inefficiencies) are 24%
2. Line losses are 10%

Result: everyone of us is paying on average 34% more than what we should be paying.

add to this the fact that only 47% of the electricity bills are paid (in combined value). Who shares the burden of these unpaid bills? Obviously those poor souls who are willing to pay their bills.

Imagine: Just improving on these inefficiencies will eliminate the need for the Govt to raise electricity prices every other month intended to deal with the ever growing circular debt. You never know that the govt might even be able to decrease the electricity prices after having solved these problems.


Doesnt this highlight the nonsensical priorities of every govt in Pakistan?
 
@ajpirzada - look at the sharp contrast of how a smartly managed K Electric has turned around.

http://www.ke.com.pk/pdf/financialdata/20131101_Quarterly-Accounts-Jul-Sept-2013.pdf

- Bill payment is continuously improving and excluding PSC at 89.2% at present while for PSCS it's 62.1%

- T and D losses are down to 29.4% (used to be in tune of 40%)

- Fleet efficiency is increasing and stands at 37.1%

- Projects like smart grid( being piloted) are set to improve losses and power management

- Most importantly the once white elephant is making profit
 
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The only solution is deregulation in major markets like Lahore, Islamabad, Faisalabad, Quetta, Peshawar.....just like Karachi. Sell older plants to private ventures. No bill payments, no electricity. Simple.
 
I would love to have the thoughts of @RiazHaq on the OP. Thanks!

Thanks for bringing my attention to it.

Investors do expect higher returns when risks are higher but these guarantees and the actual current returns to IPPS are outrageous.

Haq's Musings: Pakistanis Suffer Load-shedding While Power Companies' Profits Surge

If Kardar's claims are correct, then it seems that Pakistani leaders are repeating the mistakes of the bad IPP contracts of 1990s which have come back to haunt Pakistanis. It's truly alarming.
 
In fact, just realised that it's an old report. According to the latest report the numbers have improved further:

http://www.ke.com.pk/pdf/financialdata/Analyst Briefing.pdf

[Installed generation capacity has been enhanced by approx. 1,000 MW and overall efficiency has improved from 30.4% to 37.0%

53% reduction in transformer tripping in FY2014 vs. FY2009

Significant transmission losses reduced by 2.8 percentage points coming down from over 4% in 2008 to c. 1.4% in June 2014

88% decrease in theft in FY 2014 vs. FY 2009]

These are the things which the govt can improve without any significant expense. I really wonder if this skewed focus on more and more projects is because of some financial incentive in the form of commissions or intellectual bankruptcy of the ruling elite?
 
[Installed generation capacity has been enhanced by approx. 1,000 MW and overall efficiency has improved from 30.4% to 37.0%

53% reduction in transformer tripping in FY2014 vs. FY2009

Significant transmission losses reduced by 2.8 percentage points coming down from over 4% in 2008 to c. 1.4% in June 2014

88% decrease in theft in FY 2014 vs. FY 2009]

These are the things which the govt can improve without any significant expense. I really wonder if this skewed focus on more and more projects is because of some financial incentive in the form of commissions or intellectual bankruptcy of the ruling elite?

Pakistan needs both...new capacity as well as better management in the power sector.

Although Pakistan's 14 million BTUs per capita energy use is ahead of Bangladesh's 6 million BTUs and Sri Lanka's 10 million BTUs, it is less than India's 18 million BTUs, and far behind China's 68 million BTUs and Malaysia's 97 million BTUs.

Haq's Musings: Comprehensive Energy Policy For Pakistan's Future
 
Pakistan needs both...new capacity as well as better management in the power sector.

Although Pakistan's 14 million BTUs per capita energy use is ahead of Bangladesh's 6 million BTUs and Sri Lanka's 10 million BTUs, it is less than India's 18 million BTUs, and far behind China's 68 million BTUs and Malaysia's 97 million BTUs.

Haq's Musings: Comprehensive Energy Policy For Pakistan's Future

agreed. But these are long term projects. We have immediate problems which can be dealt with by removing these bottlenecks. Without sorting out these internal inefficiencies, we are simply adding water to the bucket with a big hole at the bottom of it.
 
[Installed generation capacity has been enhanced by approx. 1,000 MW and overall efficiency has improved from 30.4% to 37.0%

53% reduction in transformer tripping in FY2014 vs. FY2009

Significant transmission losses reduced by 2.8 percentage points coming down from over 4% in 2008 to c. 1.4% in June 2014

88% decrease in theft in FY 2014 vs. FY 2009]

These are the things which the govt can improve without any significant expense. I really wonder if this skewed focus on more and more projects is because of some financial incentive in the form of commissions or intellectual bankruptcy of the ruling elite?

Here's the overall picture of revenue-cost gap and circular debt:

Power%2BCost%2BPakistan.png



Read more at Haq's Musings: Pakistanis Suffer Load-shedding While Power Companies' Profits Surge
 
agreed. But these are long term projects. We have immediate problems which can be dealt with by removing these bottlenecks. Without sorting out these internal inefficiencies, we are simply adding water to the bucket with a big hole at the bottom of it.

In short, it has to a multi pronged strategy and we already have an example within Pakistan to show that it can be done. Tackling inefficiencies, enhancing power production and substitution/replacement of expensive fuel with cheaper alternatives. Our electricity needs are increasing at 8% a year so increase in installed capacity is also crucial.
 

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