HomeNewsBusinessLow capacity utilisation, hurdles in coal procurement add to power sector NPAs

Low capacity utilisation, hurdles in coal procurement add to power sector NPAs

Since stressed power plants cannot afford to outbid bigger players, they are forced into a vicious cycle of running below maximum capacity, relying on debt to procure the next shipment of coal to keep the plant operational.

August 08, 2018 / 15:04 IST
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Moneycontrol News

Despite the government's claims that it has succeeded in electrifying all of India's villages, many rural households are languishing in the dark, while several privately-owned power plants are mothballed or operating below optimum capacity on the back of mounting debt.

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India's total power capacity is over 3.40 lakh megawatts, almost 75 percent more than what it was six years ago. But as the demand for electricity has gone up over the years, coal-fired plants in the country's private sector have seen a drop in capacity utilization from 84 percent in 2010 to 55 percent today.

Power plants have turned unprofitable. The banking sector is saddled with stressed assets totalling as much as 40,000 MWs. According to Bank of America Merrill Lynch, the accumulated debt of dysfunctional power companies in India, amounts to $53 billion, twice the GDP of Nepal.