Most people who take an interest in the electricity sector are aware that the discom train has clearly jumped off the rails in a large number of Indian states.
Total discom losses amount to nearly 3% of the country’s GDP, despite a series of expensive bailouts in recent years and another one (UDAY) that is currently underway. Why is this so? Who is in charge of the state power sectors, and what (or who?) is holding them back from implementing 20 years’ worth of identical recommendations in consultants’ reports? Over the years, numerous and varied consultants have repeatedly identified very similar, simple and common-sense preliminary actions to reduce losses and embark on a financial recovery strategy, for the majority of discoms. That list includes the following: Create a computerised customer database; implement full metering across the network (at the distribution transformer, at the feeder and at the customer premises); introduce automated meter reading for large consumers, based on the 80-20 principle where 80% of revenues come from 20% of the customers; update billing practices and reduce inconsistencies for small customers to minimise disputes; improve collection practices with relentless focus on customer service and maximise payment convenience; track consumption patterns; carry out GIS based consumer indexing and GIS based electrical network mapping, including early identification of overloading in various key infrastructure elements like distribution transformers and undertake load flow studies for planning the growth and expansion of the network. If discom engineers were permitted to routinely undertake these measures on behalf of the discom’s shareholders and customers, then it is safe to speculate that discoms would be in a far better financial condition than they are today. Monitoring year-on-year performance would become possible and hard-to-ignore red flags would start to appear. So why were these transparency-enhancing actions not taken? And who was responsible for the fact that they were not fully implemented, despite starting with much fan-fare?
This story is from the December 2016 edition of Power Watch India.
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This story is from the December 2016 edition of Power Watch India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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