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To what end are PSBs continuing to finance coal-fired power?
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EAS Sarma | 25 Jun, 2018
The government's announcement to soon tender out 100 GW of solar power
in one go is somewhat an ambitious step towards transition to clean
energy, compared to the previous largest tender of 10 GW -- which is
likely to be opened in July.
The new tender has provisions for
boosting domestic module manufacturing and energy storage capacities as
well -- absolutely essential in light of renewables now likely to
outpace coal in new power capacity. India has thus expressed its resolve
to shift its energy development trajectory from fossil-based resources
to renewables.
This latest announcement lends further credence to
the Power Minister's claim that India will overshoot its 2022 target of
175 GW of installed renewables. Whether the target is overshot or net
additions fall just short, the government's periodic impetus for
renewables in India shows that it is indeed committed to honoring the
2015 Paris Agreement.
However, it is a matter of serious concern
that the imprudent decisions during the last decade or so to take up an
unduly large number of coal-based power projects over and above the
demand projections made by erstwhile Planning Commission and the huge
time and cost overruns in implementing those projects have not only
brought many PSU financial institutions under stress but also
potentially neutralised the benefits expected from renewables.
PSU
banks have been forced to divert their credit for refinancing the
delayed coal-based projects rather than providing credit for projects
based on renewables. In 2017 nearly 17 GW of coal-fired thermal power
was re-financed and/or extended new financing by the public sector at a
cost of Rs 60,767 crore ($9.35 billion).
Latest figures suggest
that 40,130 MW (20.3 per cent) of India's 199 GW of thermal power
capacity has been classified as stressed assets; 2,520 MW of this is
currently facing liquidation, while 10,430 MW may soon be headed that
way as no power purchase agreements (PPAs) are in place.
Even
existing coal-based power projects are operating at low Plant Load
Factors (PLFs), imposing heavy costs on state power utilities. One
reason for this is that the off-peak demand for electricity is not
sufficient to allow the excess coal-based generation to operate at full
capacity.
There are other reasons for this situation. Coal-based
power generation is becoming non-competitive in the face of sub-INR
3/kwh tariffs discovered for utility scale solar and wind power. The
massive new tender for new solar capacity will further aggravate this
problem for coal-based plants. In some cases, the absence of reliable
fuel supply contracts and bottlenecks in coal transportation have also
resulted in coal-based plants running at low PLFs. It is unlikely that
these constraints will get resolved soon.
The trend is,
therefore, painfully obvious: Coal-fired power is increasingly becoming
uncompetitive against renewables, and its future prices -- after
factoring in increasingly costlier coal imports and compliance with
tightening emission norms -- are only likely to inch upwards.
Politico-economic considerations being what they are, higher costs of
coal-based power lead to larger subsidies for electricity end-users,
which imposes a heavy burden on the public exchequer.
Adding to
the quagmire is the fact that coal-fired power plants have led to
large-scale displacement of rural families, disrupting their
livelihoods. Burning of coal, in the absence of effective regulatory
oversight, has adversely affected the health of the local communities,
leading to larger expenditure on public health schemes.
In the
normal course, financial institutions would hve exercised prudence and
refrained from extending credit to coal-based power projects in view of
their declining viability and the uncertainty in the recovery of loans.
It is therefore somewhat inexplicable that they should continue to
invest heavily in coal-based power capacity, especially at a time when
they are saddled with huge NPAs, especially power sector NPAs.
While
private sector banks have a marginal role in this, it is the PSU banks
that face this problem. If they continue to extend credit to unviable
projects, would it not necessitate recapitalisation of the PSU banks
from out of the tax-payers' money and jeopardising the interests of the
public shareholders?
Globally the trend is quite the opposite.
Prominent insurers such Lloyd's (UK), Allianz (Germany), AXA (France)
and Dai-Ichi (Japan) have already announced their termination of
insurance for coal-fired power and coal mining. Divestment from coal is
also being pursued by ING (major Dutch financial institution), the
Norwegian government's $1trillion pension fund, the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank (AIIB) and to an extent, the World Bank.
Even at
the recently concluded G7 summit, institutional investors (including
wealthy private firms) together worth nearly $26 trillion in global
assets urged the leaders to phase out coal-fired power generation.
Surely they would not have done so if they saw no trouble in remaining
invested in coal. Of course for them returns on investment may be a more
pressing concern than tackling global warming, but the two goals are
not mutually exclusive.
What then, is driving India's public
sector financing for coal-fired power? And to what end? Are we so
infatuated with relentless economic growth that we completely ignore
coal-fired power's debilitating impacts on our financial institutions,
our citizens' health and the world's precariously low carbon emission
allowances? Apparently, there are other than prudent considerations
which are compelling the government to persuade PSU banks to finance
coal-based power.
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