HomePolicies & Regulations ›Power Ministry Planning New Models for Discoms to Secure Payment to Gencos: RK Singh

Power Ministry Planning New Models for Discoms to Secure Payment to Gencos: RK Singh

This is part of organizational changes being executed by power minister R K Singh to address concerns facing the sector and draw investments required for refining quality of life with reliable and sustainable electricity supply

June 24, 2019. By News Bureau

Distribution companies will no longer be able to get away without paying for the power they obtain for supplying to consumers. The power ministry has announced that it is steering in a payment security mechanism on the ethics of the pre-paid system to safeguard swift payment to generation companies.

This is part of organizational changes being executed by power minister R K Singh to address concerns facing the sector and draw investments required for refining quality of life with reliable and sustainable electricity supply.

“We have to find lasting solutions (to issues). How long can this system carry on where we have to remonetise discoms, only for them to be back to square one a few years later. The new mechanism will force discoms to improve billing and collection as well as overall efficiency,” power minister R K Singh voiced.

A mounting load of gencos’ unpaid bills has triggered financial stress to many power projects, compelling some even to the brink of bankruptcy. The ministry’s PRAAPTI portal spikes generators’ total unpaid amount at Rs 35,845 crore at the end of April.

Under the new mechanism, discoms will have to provide LCs (letters of credit) to ‘load despatch centres’ before power from generation companies is permitted to flow to states. The despatch centres will limit the flow of power to the quantum covered by the LCs provided.

Load dispatch centres are nodal control points – akin to large railway junctions – that function at the national, regional and state levels to facilitate smooth and safe flow of power within and across states.

The ministry is projected to issue an order for the new mechanism within a week. The order is building upon the provision of LCs that exist in power purchase agreements but are followed erratically or not at all. The ministry order will empower the dispatch centres to follow the PPA provision and cut supply.

“States must pay for power for sustainable supply. Under the new system, if they don’t pay then supply will be cut off and there will be blackout which will have political cost as it makes people unhappy as the country is power surplus. There will be financial cost as well as we are going to put in place a legal framework to punish discoms for willful blackouts,” Singh believed.

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