India set to have the first power surplus in at least eight years

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India forecast an power surplus for the first time in at least eight years because of the transmission improvements and more generation. The country may have 1.1 percent excess electricity supplies in the year ending March 2017, according to the power ministry’s Central Electrical Authority.

A 2.6 percent surplus for the period is forecast for peak periods, when daily demand is highest. India’s power deficit shrank to below 1 percent in May. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s plan to light up every household by 2019 and boost manufacturing the country are expected to help lift electricity demand.

“The overall surplus estimation, while skewed due to the position in Western region, demonstrates the progress India has made in resolving fuel and power generation issues,” said Sambitosh Mohapatra, a partner at PwC India. “As the economy grows, financials of state utilities improve and rural electrification progresses, the surplus will get absorbed.”

Though supplies may surpass demand at a national level, several parts of the country may continue to face shortages according to the Central Electricity Authority. Part of the reason is that money-losing state distributors curtail power purchases and resort to blackouts. A plan to restructure their debt and make them profitable is underway.

Power demand during the current fiscal year is expected to grow 9 percent to 1.21 trillion kilowatt hours, while supplies are expected to rise almost 13 percent to 1.23 trillion kilowatt hours, according to the Central Electricity Authority.

Authorities credit this to the current BJP government’s resolve to fix issues such as the fuel scarcity, and other such initiatives as a vital link between power plants and customers, according to an Economic Times report. India, home to a sixth of the world’s population, accounts for about 6 percent of global energy use.

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