HomeNewsOpinionOpinion | The moral hazard of agreeing to the power sector's demands

Opinion | The moral hazard of agreeing to the power sector's demands

The government should focus on hard reforms for power sector instead of a bailout

August 28, 2018 / 16:52 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

The Allahabad High Court judgment denying interim relief for power producers who sought to dilute the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) 12 February circular is a welcome step. The central bank’s 12 February circular directs lenders to start the resolution process for stressed assets from the first day of default; if banks fail to achieve this within 180 days, they have to refer the asset to bankruptcy court.

The 180=day deadline for assets which were overdue on 1 March when the circular kicked into effect lapsed on 27 August. Media reports say that 70 large stressed accounts worth over Rs 3.8 lakh crore are under review. In the power sector alone, there are 34 cases amounting to 39 gigawatt of power capacity that have dues of Rs 1.8 lakh crore.

Story continues below Advertisement

Power producers have contended that they are defaulting because many of their projects are under construction/ not utilised because of factors outside their control such as lack of land acquisition and environmental clearances, and inconsistent fuel supply. At a time when there is a clear lack of buyers for power assets, most are likely to be liquidated, thus destroying value, goes their argument.

While that argument may well have some merits, at the end of the day, it is a commercial bet that has gone wrong. There is a moral hazard in agreeing to the demands of the power producers. RBI regulations have to be sector-agnostic and not cave in to special interest groups.