Thursday, February 24, 2011

Oversupply Causes Drop in Wind Turbine Prices | Renewable Energy News Article

Oversupply Causes Drop in Wind Turbine Prices | Renewable Energy News Article

Thar Coal: potential for Indo-Pakistan Collaboration

Thar Coal: potential for Indo-Pakistan Collaboration

There has been a long held desire in India and Pakistan to exploit the geographical advantage and expand trade and investment among the two countries. Most of such hopes have been sacrificed at the altar of political tensions, which have existed due to the Kashmir issue, which has been further complicated by the alleged terrorism episodes India appears to be more enthusiastic in broadening trade ties, however Pakistan links it to the settlement of the political issues. Many people in both the countries argue that strong trade links may create vested interest and stakes in peace and may create the requires rationale and pressure to solve political problems. The debate can be endless, among the unwilling partners.

Lack of availability of suitable projects has also been one of the reasons inhibiting economic cooperation among the two countries. Efforts have been made, in the past and continue to be so, towards building a project portfolio for possible collaboration, if and when political environment improves. SAARC project fund has been commissioning such studies. Reportedly, there is a SAARC energy initiative as well, headquartered in Islamabad for promoting cooperation in Energy sector. Let us explore what can be done in this direction.

Thar Coal and its vast deposits , apart from meeting Pakistan’s energy requirements, may have a potential for building and expanding regional economic cooperation .There are a number of possibilities such as; a)export of Thar coal to coal deficit adjoining states of Rajhastan and Gujrat ;b) India assisting Pakistan in developing and exploiting Thar coal resource; c) India installing coal –fired power plants in its border towns ,and exporting electricity to Pakistan produced by Pakistan exported Thar coal. Let me explain and analyze these propositions a bit.

First on India assisting Pakistan in developing Thar coal resources; India has one of the largest coal industries of the world. It has a coal fired Power Plant capacity of 50,000 MW. India has one of the most efficient coal power plant construction sectors, building coal plants at a capital cost rate of 1100 USD per KW, perhaps even cheaper than or competing with Chinese prices. It can supply consulting, training and even complete plant construction services and equipment supplies. They have experience and exposure in both types of coal; hard coal and our brown coal lignite, although most of their coal is hard coal with high ash content, considered inferior by many international end-users.

Reluctance of western countries with coal is increasing. International financing agencies are under pressure from environmental lobbies not to fund and assist such projects. Chinese appear to be reluctant as well, as reportedly; numerous attempts to revive their interest in Thar have failed. They still appear to have bitter memories from their past involvement in it and the uncooperative conduct of WAPDA that was manifested by the later. India may not be able to provide the full scope of services and may not be ultimately entrusted with a major role. However, it can be suitably involved and usefully inducted in a number of ways.

Secondly, exports of Thar coal to India’s adjoining states of Gujrat, Rajhastan and Punjab. It is a misnomer in Pakistan, that Lignite can be only utilized at mine-mouth. It is true that there is limitation in long-haul and international sea transport. However, in India Lignite is being frequently transferred in large volumes up to a distance of 400 kms. Exports to adjoining states should be very feasible, if the production and transport costs are competitive. One can only be sure of it after having done a feasibility study on the subject. This is an idea worth exploring. India is falling short of coal and has started importing it due to heavy demand. The adjoining states have a deficit of fuel/coal supplies. Exports from Pakistan may reduce traffic congestion caused due to interstate transportation of coal, which is expensive as well in terms of transportation costs.

The third proposition is rather unique, ambitious and extremely profitable, all at the same time. The detail is, that Pakistan exports/barters Thar coal to Indian border towns like Munabao and Bakhsar, the latter may not be more than 50 kms from Thar coal mines. Dedicated coal train can make several trips in a day, carrying 10,000 tons of coal in one trip. India installs Coal power plant(s) in its border town, which would remain a domestic investment in India. India burns Pakistan lignite and transmits the electricity so generated to Pakistan. India is only paid for the capital cost component, as the fuel would remain Pakistan supplied. It can become a total Barter trade, if more lignite is sent/ exported to cover the capital costs afforded by India in supplying electricity to Pakistan. There is a scope for several thousand MW of such projects.

Similar ideas have been put forward earlier as well. There were proposals for exporting electricity to India due to temporary Power excess situation created in the immediate aftermath of HUBCO installation. The proposition in this form may be unique that it offers an energy exchange opportunity. Besides, it is not a temporary surplus. Thar coal deposits are of 200 billion tons and are expected to last for centuries ahead.

Easier said than done, but it can be feasible. As for the security concerns, of large volume of goods transport and human traffic, Thar is a far-off town. Indian nationals may be allowed to come to Thar only through land route or a future direct flight from to and fro Thar. It may remain as good as domestic travel for them. Special immigration rules and status can be created for Thar coal projects. There is no major security installation or threat nearby. So security issues can be managed.

So many people and nations in the world want India and Pakistan to collaborate and work together, that the above propositions may receive instant support, if presented properly. Quite some funding could be garnered under this head. The relevant departments in the two countries and the business groups may like to examine these propositions. It pays to be optimistic, however, naïve it may sound in the beginning.

Thar Coal update

Thar Coal: some submissions

Our energy crisis is so huge and worsening that one finds it only appropriate to belabor the known facts and bring forward new thoughts and solutions that come to ones mind. By this time, it should have become obvious that there is no escape from fast tracking the Thar coal project. Hydro power is also an equally viable option which solves water storage problem also , but suffers from seasonal factors . The two resources together offer optimal opportunities to meet Pakistan’s Energy demands. Here we are focusing on Thar coal.

The bureaucratic circles tend to show that there is progress on Thar coal. But the fact remains, that there is almost none. Allocation of blocks, MOUs and even feasibility studies do not mean much, as many such things have been done in the past. Under-ground coal gasification project has raised false hopes among the public. Without casting doubts on the scientific credentials of its eminent promoters and on the technological potential of the route adopted, the problem of scaling up would remain for which there is no capability in the country of a level that would be acceptable to the lending banks. While the existing gasification would yield useful data, we would be back to the square one, which is of requisite financing.

The bad news is that under criticism and pressure from international Green lobbies, World Bank has discontinued its technical assistance program on Thar coal, amidst news that government of Sindh has persuaded them to renew it. Even if they do renew, it sends us ample signals on difficulties that we are going to face towards financing Thar coal. With time, the opposition to coal would increase. Our problem is immediate and the renewables are still to be perfected and improved to be cost effective and competitive. In any case, renewables are projected to have a share of 20% even by the year 2050 .What are we to do in the meantime. The threat is that by the time we put our act together, although fossil based power age may not be over, the financing regime may become too difficult and hostile against coal.

The residual issue as it stands today is not the financing issue of the mining and power parts of the projects, however difficult it may itself be, it is the financing of infrastructure part which is proving to be a stumbling block. Various estimates put these requirements to between 1 to 2 billion US dollars. More money is required for infrastructure, than the first coal mine and power plant itself .Government of Sindh, obviously would not have such resources, nor would the federal government. And in these days of emphasis on provincial autonomy, where is the appetite for common projects. There are also issues as to the technical and management capability of the provincial bureaucracy, as the project continues to be run from the narrow confines of the Sindh secretariat. Apparently, there is no shaft of light at the end of this tunnel, although it is not the only one.

In all humbleness, this scribe makes the following proposals. There are two options. One is to tender for a large project of 5000 MW or so, which may be able to assume the infrastructural development costs. The cake becomes big enough to absorb all kinds of interests. This is not new .In India, this size of coal projects are being planned already. The feasibility of this proposal in Pakistan context can only be tested once it is actually tendered. The second option would be to float tenders for establishing a mining development company that undertakes to develop and finance the infrastructure and manages the Thar coal operations on behalf of Sindh government, within the framework of the relevant rules and regulations. The company recoups its investments by granting mining leases and charging a fee on coal production by individual companies. Obviously such a company would be a multinational which may have a joint venture with local private sector and government of Sindh’s share in it. Such a company would offer many advantages. First of all to bring in finances, which appear to be well-nigh impossible for Sindh government to finance? Secondly, the operations would be more commercial like and would be on fast track. Ironically, I have made a case of yet another feasibility study? Not necessarily.

Certain issues related to the 18th Amendment need to be sorted out. After the amendment, Electricity sector becomes a federal only subject, as there is no concurrent list any more. Earlier Electricity was in concurrent list. Coal was and is a provincial subject. If I understand correctly, federal responsibility and role in Electrical power sector should be larger than it was prior to the amendment. Thar coal power development , therefore, ought to occupy higher priority in Federal budgeting system. It may not be a bad idea considering some kind of linkage between investments in Hydro and Thar coal power; one project in hydel, and one in Thar coal. There is a technical requirement to balance hydel power as well. Gas being no more and oil unaffordably expensive and imported, thermal energy in future should mean Thar coal energy. Politicians from Sindh can suitably make a convincing case, provided they are also prepared to readily agree to federal involvement.

Let me close with good news, if at all. Some politicians lately made a statement that Thar coal is larger than the oil resources of our rich brothers of the Middle East. Many people cast a doubt on such an assertion. This scribe has collected facts and data and has made some calculations and is happy to report that these claims are by far correct with the following details and provisos. Total Middle East Oil and gas resources add up to equivalent of 385 billion tons of Brown coal, out of which Iran and Saudi Arabia own 110 billion tons of coal equivalent each. Pakistan’s Thar coal is 185 billion tons. We should, however, remember that Saudis would have been quite poor had they had 189 million people to support, instead of their current population of 25 million only.

The writer is a former Harvard University fellow, and has authored the book “ Pakistan’s Energy Development; the road ahead”,

The natural gas controversy

The natural gas controversy

There is a general gas shortage in the country for the past few years. Known reserves and deposits are on the way to exhaustion, while the exploration activity has been at a low level. Most of the gas these days is being produced these days. Gone are the days when most gas used to come from Sui in Balochistan. Thanks to exploration activities in Sindh, many new deposits have been discovered in Sindh and production started from those wells. More exploration activity is expected to yield new gas resources in Sindh. Due to the political and law and order problems in Balochistan ,no new deposits are being discovered as no exploration activity could be sustained there for the past many years. This is a very unfortunate situation , in which no body is benefitting, people or province of Balochistan who are deprived of income and employment and the other parts of the country and people as they are facing gas shortages.

Shortages create many economic and political problems. A number of controversies have developed. Industries have protested and some of which closed down in protest or due to gas shortage. Earlier Sindh assembly passed a resolution demanding priority in gas allocation and a number of prominent politicians issued statements in this respect. They have complained that Sindh's gas is being taken elsewhere in the central system and that Sindh’s demands should be met first, and then the residual should go elsewhere. The issue of distribution priorities! They have argued that there is a constitutional provision in support of this stance. Now KESC has joined the debate. In a message to the public and consumers in Karachi printed in this newspaper, CEO of KESC demanded more gas allocation and implied that the gas supplies were available and adequate gas supplies are unfairly denied to his company. And in a related case, LPG distributors are going on strike because of what they think is an arbitrary increase in prices by the LPG producers’ cartel. Let us examine the merits of the issue. To top it all, some multilateral agencies are proposing to enhance gas prices to the level of line which in their view would solve many problems including the ones in gas allocation. GOP is already under severe public pressure regarding the proposed increase in electricity tariff. This last issue would require exclusive discussion and we leave it to some future opportunity. We would examine here the other issues as described earlier in the above.

There is a general shortage of gas throughout the country. Power plants in Sindh are not getting enough gas and thus load shedding of electricity. Gas and electricity are distributed to user sectors and customers who pay for the service. It is not supplied to an abstract concept or entity as a province. Then gas is distributed and allocated as per priorities. For example, fertilizer sector is a priority and supposing all of the capacity is located in Sindh, allocating and distributing gas to Fertilizer sector does not mean that gas is allocated to Sindh.

If this logic of prior right of producing province is accepted, then many problems would have been created for Sindh itself. Gas exploration and abundance in Sindh is only a recent phenomenon. Previously all gas consumed by Sindh came from Balochistan and most hydro electricity came from Sarhad/KP. Very little was consumed or allocated in the producer provinces, as there was no demand or distribution investment was not justified for widely scattered insufficient demand. Similar demands and protestations were made by some circles in Balochistan, when natural gas was brought to Karachi and Sindh first leaving Balochistan towns unsupplied.

The issue is that Production, transmission and distribution facilities have to be invested in. Often the investment comes from private and foreign entities that have to be paid back. The revenue is generated through consumers and customers and not from provincial or federal government. Principles of economic efficiency, markets, sustainability and rate of return to investors are involved. If we do not learn to respect these principles, we are going to end up in more shortages due to lack of investment in supplies sector and higher production costs of utilities and services. The capacity of people to pay has already reached or even crossed their limits.

If there is a shortfall both equity and efficiency considerations are their in allocating priorities. Where there is no efficiency or criticality issue, equity principles of equal distress are to be applied and not a province based formula based on the ownership of resource.

As to the ownership issue of the resource , except for political ownership which does not mean much in practical sense ,bulk of the resource(88%) that has been extracted belongs to the producer who has spent money, effort ,resources and know-how in bringing out the resource from the earth and processing it and making it use-worthy. So the ownership of the extracted resource belongs to the producer, save the royalty portion of say 12%, and not to the province where the resource is located. What is in ground belongs to a people and provincial or federal government as per laws and constitution of the country, but when it comes out of ground it is a different issue.

Energy sector in Pakistan has been developed as one undivided market. It is still the case even after 18th amendment. Electricity has become a federal only subject, while it used to be a concurrent subject earlier. In the past almost all investments in energy have come from federal or foreign equity or debt sources. All WAPDA investments and the ones in Oil and Gas have come from federal kitty. And even in future all investments in nuclear and hydro resources is to come from federal resources. After all these investments, would KP politicians be in their right to make similar demands of electricity ownership. Certainly, they can demand their royalties which issue should be resolved on a permanent basis. They cannot possibly demand that Tarbela should meet their demand first and then the electricity should flow to the rest of the country. KP has been suffering severe load-shedding despite Tarbela being right there. In future also when hydro power would come from Bhasha and Bunji etc dams, there would be no fundamental right of priority allocation to KP. In fact if Sindh’s argument and demand of priority allocation based on producer provinces right is accepted and established, it would be a sufferer in the long run .Temporary advantages and ups and downs do develop in various parts of the country at different times and these should not lead us to bring in constitutional issues unnecessarily.

Constitutional provisions are often desires and ideals. These have to be creatively and constructively interpreted and understood. It is well-nigh impossible for the framers of the constitution to understand the implication of every sentence they write into the constitution. American constitution explicitly allows only currency, defence and foreign policy in federal domain. American courts have interpreted the constitution so broadly and in totality, that there are sixteen federal ministries dealing with 16 or more subjects. Constitution may have to be amended if too literal interpretation of the quoted constitutional clause is attempted.

As for KESC, its issue is a bit complicated due to the tariff issue, which may not be intelligible to the non-specialist. KESC runs on what is called a constant tariff, with periodic adjustments for the fuel price inflation and general inflation as well. Gas is more thermally efficient fuel than oil in the sense that in combined cycle plants, an efficiency of 50% or more is possible to day than the traditional efficiency of steam turbine plants run on oil. KESC is expected to earn through increase in thermal efficiency and reduce other losses and leakages. There are many other issues with KESC tariff formula as it exists today. Normally such formulae are agreed to for relatively short periods. It has no answers or solutions for the long run. It may cause much more serious problems in future, details of which cannot be explained in this space. A review of this formula is required, along with a number of reforms and pro-active actions. For the time being GOP has allowed Oil sales and supply in lieu of non-supplied gas, at the price of gas. Perhaps this solves KESC’s working capital problem. A longer run solution would require the following steps; KESC should be a part of the central pool and eligible to draw from the central pool as per an agreed formula ; KESC to be treated as an IPP, and allowed to make investments in generation outside Karachi, for example utilizing cheaper gas resources elsewhere. KESC’s generation assets and activities be separated and treated at par with other IPPs .A new tariff formula based on cost-plus approach and central whole-sale pricing is introduced as it is there in other parts of Pakistan

Transparency in Oil & gas sector

Transparency in Oil & gas sector

In this article, I wish to uniform my readers of something in Petroleum pricing which is almost scandalous. OGRA regulates and periodically announces Petroleum prices that includes Diesel, but that is Light Diesel Oil (LDO) which forms to be a negligible portion of the consumption. The real Diesel, HSD which is used in road transports, trucks and buses, is apparently and clearly out of OGRA’s purview. Ministry of Petroleum is fixing these prices without regulation through its own notification posted on PSO’s web-site. As mentioned earlier, LDO and its pricing are hardly of any consequence. It is such loopholes and gaps in regulatory regime that are the focus of this piece. Also the bipartisan committee which is holding session these days on economic reforms must look into this.

HSD’s latest price is Rs.78.33 per liter as compared to the regulated Rs.66.61 for LDO and Rs.72.96 for Gasoline (premium grade petrol).That means that the real Diesel (HSD) is 7.36% (higher than the ordinary petrol) and 17.59% higher than the regulated Diesel price. There are two problems here. Except in the US, Diesel is priced much lower than the Gasoline, for a very reasonable and understandable logic that the Diesel is used in public transport and thus should be priced cheaper. Those who argue against cheaper diesel normally base their argument for environmental reasons. However, in Europe where the environmental lobby is the strongest, Diesel is priced lower than gasoline. Are we trying to be more loyal than the king? No wonder we have galloping inflation, especially in the sensitive price index. Pricing although very important, however, is not the focus of this article, which has been discussed at length in an earlier piece in this newspaper by this scribe. The issue is lacking transparency and persistent attitude of the ministry of petroleum against regulation and transparency. OGRA declares no Petroleum Levy on Diesel and no dealer margin and people believe it so. But the ministry circular builds in Rs 5.00 per liter as Petroleum Levy in the basic price and adds up another Rs 14.00 to a Liter for all kinds of margins All of which outside the not so watchful eyes of our OGRA. Transparency is in order.

Ideally all prices should be determined through unhindered market forces and their competition. It requires a large number of buyers and sellers. In Pakistan and other similar developing countries, sellers are usually not in high numbers and usually collude in price fixing and hoarding and manipulation of all kind. Sugar is a good testimony to the afore-mentioned. In the case of utilities such as electric power and oil and gas, there is a strong case of due regulatory process due to the monopolistic character of this sector. NEPRA and OGRA have been formed in this perspective.

Transparency in regulated sectors is measured by the following factors;

1) Independence and reasonable domain of the regulatory agencies.

1) Written and publicly available policies, rules and regulations.

2) Public participation in Tariff and pricing.

3) Un- restricted publishing of data

Measured on the above yardsticks, Oil and gas sector in Pakistan appears to be quite lacking. On the other hand, Pakistan’s electricity sector and NEPRA’s performance in this respect appear to be far better. An examination of the websites of NEPRA and OGRA would amply demonstrate this. While NEPRA website is full of petitions and determinations, public hearings and data, OGRA website publishes tariff without any pretension of public process. We will examine transparency issues in oil and gas sector and OGRA’s role and performance in some detail in this article.

OGRA’s regulatory process seems to be only concerned with the determination of Tariff for the Transmission and Distribution of natural gas that is supplied by the two companies, SSGC and SNGPL. Measured on the above transparency criteria, the performance in this limited respect appears to be relatively much more acceptable. On the technical side (standards) also, there appears to be a reasonable OGRA activity and performance.

Oil and gas sector is worth more than twenty billion US dollar in terms of sales and output. Except for the aforementioned exception of Gas T&D and mere posting of petroleum retail prices and gas wellhead prices, there isn’t much to show by OGRA. The sector is almost totally regulated, except LPG where there is confusion as to the regulatory domain. Admittedly OGRA works within the framework of the role assigned to it by Ministry of Petroleum (MPNR) and the GOP. It cannot arrogate powers to itself, although it can build pressure towards higher domain and role for itself. The due process is lacking in the following areas: Surely there are and must be rules in the following areas which in itself is not enough. The actual application and adjudication of those rules is to be the subject of due public process, where price is not determined by the market forces. International transparency moves and initiatives these days even go beyond public tariff and pricing determinations. They are demanding Publish what you pay(PWYP)policies and regime, for it has been found that the actual payments vis-à-vis publically determine tariff may be deviating for legitimate and not so legitimate reasons. Following areas should come under some process of public input and scrutiny through the regulatory process of OGRA and the latter should not restrict to posting of results but invoke the whole regulatory input and process into these.

1) Well-head prices of oil and gas.

2) Ex-refinery prices of petroleum products such as gasoline and diesel, including crude oil imports

3) Oil pipeline tariff

4) PSO imports of petroleum products (50% of the total demand is met through imports valued at around 8 billion dollars)

5) Furnace oil pricing despite claims of being in the open sector; and most importantly

6) High Speed Diesel (HSD) pricing.

On the other hand, what little powers have been granted to OGRA, successive leadership of that organization have not chosen to make use of those. For example who stops OGRA in holding public hearing for discussions on the other constituents of petroleum prices, if the ex-refinery (wholesale or producer price) is made an untouchable tree for it?

MPNR has traditionally being reluctant to cede powers to OGRA. In all the above areas, the closed offices of oil bureaucracy have the sway. There has been much controversy regarding the self pricing role of OCAC (Oil Companies Advisory Committee) which has since been disbanded or depowered. It is ironic that OGRA is not considered adequate enough for the role of OCAC .Who does not like power and authority? Public process absolves responsibility and implication of public servants in scams and others in a highly skeptic Pakistani society today. They should support the expansion of public process. Transparency would also encourage and promoted much needed direct foreign investment in this vital sector. And finally, it is the responsibility of legislature and public representatives to intervene and write laws and require regulation in this respect.

The writer is a former Harvard University fellow and is the author of ,”Pakistan’s Energy Development; the road ahead”.

Life after 100 USD per barrel price ?

Petrol prices: What after 100 dollar per barrel crude oil.

Brent Crude oil prices have touched a dollar 100 per barrel mark in the wake of political events in Egypt which through its Suez Canal passes quite some oil. No more are the OPEC and Middle Eastern countries the only beneficiaries of oil price increases. Russia has emerged as the largest oil producer and Exxon Mobil has posted 100 billion USD profit this quarter.

Pakistan imports a large amount of oil to the tune of 10-11 billion USD per year, which accounts for 33% of its total imports. High oil prices have damaged Pakistan’s economy very significantly, causing inflation, trade deficits, balance of payment difficulties, currency depreciation and shortage of energy and consequent loss of production.

Government of Pakistan has announced that it will not increase domestic Petrol and Diesel prices.

Recent oil price increase had to be reversed by the government under tremendous public pressure and political action. The reversal has been welcome domestically and opposed by international quarters erroneously calling it a subsidy. Energy prices are also on the agenda of talks going on between the two mainstream political parties of the country. Something good should come out of it on its own merit, if not for preventing an upcoming political impasse. Energy pricing improvements and policy changes offer some opportunity towards this end.

People were quite used to the existing oil pricing arrangement linking domestic prices with the movement in international prices. This time oil price increase came amidst back-breaking inflation and rising electricity prices. Besides, the petrol prices peaked to Rs.79.96 for gasoline and Rs.70.97 per liter , which was perhaps beyond the upper limit of consumer capacity to pay, as evidenced by the enormity of public pressure. The prices have been brought down to the December level. In today’s petroleum prices, there is a very low level of tax apart from the usual GST. There is no Petroleum Levy on Diesel due to the reversal and a very marginal one of Rs. 4.27 per liter on Petrol. Due to the preponderance of Diesel in the total consumption, the small levy on Petrol would not earn the government much except the GST. Is this a permanent price freeze irrespective of where the international prices go? What are the options with government in this respect? I am arguing for a zero-energy taxation regime .I will explain this a little later, after a little perspective on energy pricing.

Pakistan is among third tier countries along with other regional countries in a four- tier oil pricing regime prevailing in the world. In the first tier come the oil exporting developing countries of the middle east and south America , which grossly subsidize domestic petroleum products ,selling much below the crude prices, recouping probably the distribution cost only . The petrol price in Saudi Arabia is half a Riyal (Rs. 10) per liter; and similarly in other countries in this category. The second tier is of the U.S and others which marginally tax petroleum. Today’s Gasoline price in the US is 3.1 USD per gallon (Rs.66.57 per liter) as opposed to Rs 72.95 in Pakistan, and Rs 66.61 for Diesel. Petroleum Taxation in the U.S. does not exceed 15%.Third tier countries are Pakistan, India and Bangladesh etc which significantly tax Petrol. Current Petroleum prices in India are much higher than in Pakistan. Diesel costs Indian Rupees 42.06(Pk. Rs. 76 or 0.912 USD) per liter, while Petrol costs IRs 63.08(PkRs. 114 or 1.322 USD) per liter in Mumbai. Delhi prices are usually 5 IRs lower than elsewhere in India due to regional variations in taxation permitted by Indian Federalism. Diesel prices have not been raised since September 2010, while Gasoline has undergone frequent adjustments lately. Thus we see that in Pakistan Petroleum prices are considerably lower in Pakistan than India ; Indian Diesel price being 14% higher and Gasoline 56% higher.

In India , Petrol prices are allowed to remain stable for significant periods like six months or so and the international prices are not passed on to the consumer immediately as it is currently done in Pakistan. We had the same system earlier, which was replaced by the current system following criticism .As we have seen recently, a high but temporary rise in Petroleum price has the potential of causing social order and political swing. Lower prices normally go unnoticed. There is a rationale for day-to-day pricing in open uncontrolled markets. In a regulated market, one should reevaluate as to the merits of existing monthly price adjustments. Current reversal is a step towards the earlier system of variable taxation. Simply speaking, the government reduced the Oil Development Levy, a kind of a tax. In fourth tier countries come, most of the Europe which heavily tax petroleum. Today’s Petrol price in U.K, France, Germany and Netherlands are 1.45 Euro (Rs.167) per liter; a taxation rate of more than 100 %.

European taxation of Petroleum is partly a hang-over from the socialist past, wherein petroleum and cars were traditionally considered items for the rich. Today Petroleum finances public welfare expenditure in these countries. The impact is, however, only partially compensated by energy efficiency and conservation. Petroleum taxation has also been considered as a user charge of roads and transportation network. A charge of 10 cents per liter has been considered adequate for this purpose, as a recent GTZ study suggests. This comes out to Rs 8.3 per liter road tax. Infact petrol levy could be termed as Road user charge. At a consumption of 12 billion liters of consumption (85% of which is diesel), this comes out to be Rs 100.0 billion revenue stream annually. Alternatively, a subsidy at the same rate would cost the same amount. Preponderance of diesel consumption of 85% precludes any cross-subsidy option of Gasoline vis-à-vis Diesel. From the year 2009, Petroleum Levy of Rs 3.00 per liter has been charged which has been brought to zero after the price reversal. Similarly there was a constant Petrol Levy of Rs.10 per liter, which has been brought down to Rs.4.27 per liter. At crude oil prices as high as 92.40 USD per barrel, there is hardly any scope of taxation on Petroleum. Infact if it goes beyond 100 USD which is not unthinkable, GST may have to be reduced or removed , depending on the volume of crude price increase. Around the same time, we may have to consider some kind of rationing or quotas, voluntary or mandatory, however, unfashionable or unattractive that may sound.

Fortunately, the European incomes can possibly support high petrol prices and taxation. European argument does not apply in countries like ours. Secondly, Diesel a fuel used in mostly public transport and commercial vehicles used to be taxed low or none at all in many countries. Under environmental pressures Diesel is being discouraged and price differential has been reduced very significantly. In our specific situation and particularly under present conditions, this price differentiation may have to be brought back for at least next five years.

Coming to Electricity Tariff which remained somewhat affordable till 2008-09 for a variety of reasons such as reasonable exchange rate, lower oil prices, and lesser share of oil in electricity generation combined with subsidy. For several years during Musharraf period, electricity Tariff was not raised despite rise in cost of electricity generation and increasing theft. At the time of Musharraf’s exit, electrical subsidies amounted to around one rupee per unit. Falling exchange rate and rising oil prices gave rise to unfunded subsidies which gave rise to what we call Circular debt starting from a Musharraf periods level of more than one hundred billion rupees. Rising circular debt has substantially reduced working capital of utilities and Energy industries resulting in shortage in electricity production which also results in higher costs due to interest charges and higher unit fixed costs due to spread of fixed costs on a decreasing number of units produced and sold.

Thus Electricity used to be cheaper in Pakistan earlier, almost comparable to the low rates of the U.S. of an average of ten cents a unit for residential sector. For small consumer, the rates are still very low much below the cost of production. Again in Europe the Electrical tariff is very high. In several countries such as Sweden, Denmark and Netherlands, it is 25 cents (Rupees 21) per unit. A significant portion of these high prices comes from the high cost of renewable energy being promoted in these countries under high feed-in-tariff schemes.

In this rather long perspective let us revert to the zero-energy taxation regime. Simply put this means integrating the energy sector and its taxation; pooling the taxes and subsidies to balance and cancel each other. This would allow withdrawal of electrical subsidies and reduction in petroleum taxation resulting in falling petroleum prices with the rise in Electrical tariff. This may be acceptable and affordable to all parties; lower prices to consumer, no budgetary loss. Above all, it would be sellable to lenders and donors which pose a major constraint in independent economic policy making.

Petroleum taxation is a major cause of inflation in Pakistan, especially in sensitive prices index. All daily consumption items have to be transported from long distances to retail outlets and daily workers travel to suburbs which are at the city limits requiring major transportation expense. Petroleum taxation and in general all indirect taxation has been guided more by practical reasons of collectability at source or purchase and rather than much economic rationale. A marginal petroleum tax may still be maintained to cover the user charge and financing needs of the transportation sector.

The writer is a former Harvard University fellow and author of Pakistan’s Energy Development:the road ahead

Curing the ailing Energy sector ;some humble submissions

By Akhtar Ali

Pakistan is facing the worst energy crisis of its history.Perhaps no other crisis or difficulty has caused as much damage to Pakistan’s social and economic conditions as energy issue has.It has caused trade and foreign exchange deficit , currency devaluation , decline in economic out and exports and has caused massive unemployment.The Energy issue merits highest attention of the government in developing and implementing short term and long term measures.Here are some of the suggestions in this respect.

1)Development of Local Energy Resources

Pakistan has imported 10-11 billion USD worth of oil per year over the past few years.High and volatile oil prices have damaged Pakistan’s economy. The continuing reliance on oil for producing electricity is a highly dangerous trend. Most projects that have come on stream in the last few years and the ones in pipeline are IC engines running on RFO. The danger stems from three directions; one is increasing cost of generation of electricity (COGE) and the other raising the foreign exchange import bill. The oil price hike of 2007-8 virtually destroyed the economy and damaged electricity / energy sector. Thirdly ,oil based IC engines are less efficient than other options.

Thar coal is larger than the oil resources of our rich brothers of the Middle East.. Total Middle East Oil and gas resources add up to equivalent of 385 billion tons of Brown coal, out of which Iran and Saudi Arabia own 110 billion tons of coal equivalent each. Pakistan’s Thar coal is 185 billion tons. There is an urgent need to develop THAR coal, without which Pakistan’s energy problem can not be solved. Federal Government (GOP) and its institutions must support THAR coal development. Only coal is provincial subject, but electricity remains a federal subject even after 18th amendment.Similarly Hydo and Wind potential offer near term solutions.

2)Financing Thar Coal

The residual issue as it stands today is not the financing issue of the mining and power parts of the projects, however difficult it may itself be, it is the financing of infrastructure part which is proving to be a stumbling block. Various estimates put these requirements to between 1 to 2 billion US dollars. More money is required for infrastructure, than the first coal mine and power plant itself .Government of Sindh, obviously would not have such resources, nor would the federal government. And in these days of emphasis on provincial autonomy, where is the appetite for common projects. There are also issues as to the technical and management capability of the provincial bureaucracy, as the project continues to be run from the narrow confines of the Sindh secretariat. Apparently, there is no shaft of light at the end of this tunnel, although it is not the only one.

. There are two options. One is to tender for a large project of 5000 MW or so, which may be able to assume the infrastructural development costs. The cake becomes big enough to absorb all kinds of interests. This is not new .In India, this size of coal projects are being planned already. The feasibility of this proposal in Pakistan context can only be tested once it is actually tendered. The second option would be to float tenders for establishing a mining development company that undertakes to develop and finance the infrastructure and manages the Thar coal operations on behalf of the Sindh government, within the framework of the relevant rules and regulations. The company recoups its investments by granting mining leases and charging a fee on coal production by individual companies. Obviously such a company would be a multinational which may have a joint venture with local private sector and government of Sindh’s share in it. Such a company would offer many advantages. First of all to bring in finances, which appear to be well-nigh impossible for Sindh government to finance? Secondly, the operations would be more commercial like and would be on fast track.

3) Importing Coal

Uncertainties over Thar Coal implementation have compelled investors to think about imported coal.Several projects have been proposed in the past based on imported coal. Imported coal although cheaper than oil , it is no less volatile than Oil in terms of price variability. In the oil price hike of 20007-8 , coal prices also rose proportionally and came down proportionally. It is not coal per se ,but the local resource development and controllable prices offered by local coal that is to be a preferred option. If at all , permission may be granted for imported coal for an interim period , and conversion be required to be built in when Thar coal becomes available.

Permitting imported coal project would send a final signal for closing off Thar coal resource.

4)Conversion to Coal

Many oil-fired (Steam Turbine) power plants were converted to coal in the wake of Oil crisis of 1973, and the trend continues till todate despite heightened environmental opposition. The dilemma that,however,is to be faced is whether it is local coal or imported one.Coal is already being imported for non-utility industrial purposes and local Hard coal is being mined locally as well,although under low productivity and inefficient environment.Hard coal production ,although with smaller deposits , could be fast tracked by installing modern mining equipment and management practices. Utilities use of this coal would spur such conversion.In Punjab ,50 MW coal based power plants have already been proposed under provincial domain. Conversion to imported coal should also be subject to the same provisos as has been proposed in the earlier para.

5)Controlling High Cost of Generation of Electricity(COGE)

2- All efforts must be made towards controlling the electricity cost and tariff. The full brunt of high cost projects has not yet been felt, due to the availability of one –third electricity form old hydro project like TARBELA at Rs. 1.30 per unit. There are three aspects that need special attention.

1. Capital costs esp of power generation projects.

2. Thermal efficiency

3. Reduction of technical and non-technical losses.

6)Capital Costs;

There is a general consensus among experts in Pakistan that capital cost of generation projects are high. In the adjoining table, we provide data on comparative capital cost, which is self explanatory.There may be both technical and commercial reasons for this.Regulatory effort and capability in this respect need a lot of improvement. In developed companies of all market size ,electricity generation prices are market driven.In India there is a big market and local industry and sufficient domestic market data is available.CERC India is able to announce bench mark rates for capital cost with much less difficulty.In Pakistan NEPRA does not have recourse to such inputs. Neither does NEPRA seem to have made adequate efforts to enhance its capability in this respect. It relies on simple brow beating the proponent into some down ward adjustment based on some input form in adequately informed interveners, and EPC quotes.

In this respect, we make the following recommendations :

1. NEPRA announce bench mark capital cost for three years (indexed) based on external / foreign consultant recommendations.

2. EPC for turnkey projects is replaced by a package approach, where by a project is tendered in 5-6 packages.

3. PPRA procurement rules must be made mandatory for all regulated projects, including energy and electricity.

4. NEPRA invests in acquiring and subscribing to 3rd party data source on capital costs, intead of constructing buildings for its offices.

A case in point is the remarkable difference in capital costs and COGE of wind power, among India and Pakistan. In India the capital cost of wind projects is half that of Pakistan, 1200 USD per kW vs 2500-2700 USD per kW in Pakistan. A part from potential and ubiquitous padding, local production of wind turbines in India and total imported content in Pakistan, many have resulted in such a large cost differential.

7)Opening up of electricity market

Consideration may be given for introducing an element of open market and liberalization in the electricity sector. Some of the feasible steps may be the following:

1. promoting consumers choice for large customers (1MW+).

2. opening up electricity transmission by allowing 3rd party access on pre-determined wheeling tariff.

3. doing away with generation licensing requirements for up to 3-5 MW. Mandatory filing many be continued for 1M and upwards.

4. promotion and permission of open market operations among producers and large consumers on mutually negotiated tariff utilizing open transmission regime.

5. promotion of independent electricity marketing companies.

8)Royalties:

8.1)Hydro royalties:

A permanent solution to hydropower royalty / net profit issue should be finalized. Ideal and most practical solution may be giving 12% free electricity ( ala- India) to the producing province with provisions for sharing with local governments. An alternative is to compute royalty dues at the rate of 12% of CPPA price ;both options are almost equivalent.

8.2)Wind power royalty:

It is unfair and even unconstitutional to drive benefit from provincial lands without adequate compensation or royalties. No royalty is being included in the NEPRA tariff calculations yet. A policy must be announced in this respect. Wind power royalty is to go to the land owner/ lessor. If a government is the owner,Federal, Provincial or Local. that government may get the royalty. If it is a private land, private owner gets it. A rate of 2% of sales has been popular in many western countries. This is also compatible with royalty formulae in mineral sector. At this moment only Sindh province would benefit from it. Wind potential is there in other provinces as well, esp in NWFP and Balochistan and FATA who would benefit from it eventually. It may be worth noting that Wind Turbines use only 3-5% of the WIND FARM area, which can continue to be utilized for agricultural purposes. Based on 150 million kWh per year of electricity sales per year of a 50MW wind power plant, a royalty of 2% would mean an royalty income of 1.5 million USD per year, that could be shared among local and provincial governments depending on the ownership status of the land. Fortunately wind power / costs are coming down due to emergence of solar option, and unsold inventories are building up. The additional 2% incidence of royalty would be tolerable now than ever before. NEPRA would be well advised to revise its determinations on WIND POWER in the light of recent downwards trend in wind power equipment prices world-wide

9)Reorganisation of the Energy sector

Recent Energy Summit deliberations and its output have indicated the need to take a total and integrated view of the Energy sector,be it short term emergent needs or longer term planning and management.Following steps are recommended in this respect :

1)Merger of the Ministry of Water & Power and Ministry of Petroleum into one Ministry of Energy.After the 18th ammendment, there is not going to be much federal involvement in mineral sector anyway.Except for India , many Federal countries have adopted this approach.

2)Merger of NEPRA and OGRA , which would enable the two organisations to learn from each others strength , cross pollinate the ideas ,and facilitate a coordinated energy regulation.In most countries ,this practice has been adopted including the USA(FERC), Singapore and elsewhere.

10)Reorganisation and liberalisation of the GAS sector

The current domination of the sector by two distribution companies (SNGPL & SSGC)must go and the sector and the two companies fragmented on the lines of electricity sector , namely replaced by one or two Transmission companies and several distribution companies like LESCO, GEPCO, FESCO etc.

2)Open transmission access regime to third-party suppliers and gas producers along with consumer choice for large customers be instituted.

3)Gas market and a parallel unregulated gas sector , in addition to the existing regulated one,be instituted to promote investment ,production and greater supplie in the sector.This should also cover and include the so called TIGHT or UNCONVENTIONAL gas exploration and production.

4)Draft Rules for TIGHT GAS , in the absence of the proposed de-regulation ,seem to be adequate and forward looking. Consideration may be given to pegging the TIGHT GAS PRICE to 75% of the oil price subject to 100 USD per barrel of upper slab,as has been the case of imported gas from Iran.

11)Demand Management

Recent energy summit has prescribed short term demand measure. Longer term rules are required to be put in place. Two most important ones are suggested in the following:

1)Restriction of air-conditioning load during peak hours for consumers having demand exceeding 100-200 KW , and obliging them either to install gas based air-conditioning of absorption chillers or buy-in chilled water from distributed cooling systems.A sufficient notice of two years be given to such users.Malaysia has introduced this provision for quite some time now.Distributed cooling through chilled water distribution has become quite well known in several middle Eastern and South East Asian countries.

2)Distributed and district cooling projects be promoted and mandated in co-generation and tri-generation mode which has a potential of a thermal efficiency of 75% as opposed to present average of 40% in good cases.

12)Revamping Existing Generation capacity.

1)Against an installed capacity of some 22000 MW, existing peak generation does not go beyond 14000 MW.Although circular debt and consequent financial problems of energy companies has had a role in lack of adequate electricity generation,it is widely recognised that some 3-5000 MW of existing capacity needs a varying degree and level of revamping/BMR.Prior and immediate attention may be given to those projects including privatisation of such units along with their gas allocations.GOP/MoWP are reportedly seized of this matter , along with USAID support in this respect.

2)Single cycle gas turbines(mostly out-dated) should be put much later in the economic dispatch order ,than is the current should not have a capacity factor/utilisation of more than 20-30%.

3)NEPRA monitoring code of generation capacity should be implemented with strictness and monthly wesite publishing be made mandatory.Electricity generation data by generation facility must be published daily by CPPA/NTDC.

13)Reduction of T&D losses including theft in Electricity and Gas sector.

1)Ironically T&D losses in electricity sector in Punjab are minimal (12%), while elsewhere these exceed 25-30%.In industriallised countries T&D losses to the exclusion of non-existing theft are a mere 5 %.However in the same very Punjab, gaT&D losses ,which mostly are shear theft,are phenominally high ,much higher than in Southern sector (SSGC network) .This indicates that company culture and history ,its organsation,work-force and management has a lot to do with theft than the possible sociological factors. Regulatory authorities ought to delve deeper into this phenomenon.

2) USAID assistance ala DRUM project India must be procured where such programmes are showing good results. India, to consolation of many among us

14)Renewable Energy

14.1)Solar Energy

It appears that the earlier US target of achieving grid-parity in 2015, meaning that solar power becomes competitive with fossil power on the electric grid, would be achieved. The indicators are several; last month, the quoted capital cost rates in the U.S. markets came down to 3.5 USD per KW, it used to be more than twice this figure only some years back. Solar cells of high thermal efficiency (mono-crystalline Si- 17.5% efficiency) are costing less than 2.5 USD per KW, and thin- film lesser efficiency ones are being sold at 1.0 USD per kW or less. In China, several government contracts have been made at the rate of 1.5 USD per kW for domestic power, although Chinese rates, especially in the domestic market do not quite reflect true costs and prices. Still, it gives some trend.

However, even if grid parity in solar power is achieved as early as 2015, it would not mean overnight conversion in the US, Europe and Japan. It would take a long time to develop production and supplies infrastructure. Solar and other renewable market share in the developed world may not exceed 10-15 % by 2030, although new fossil plants construction rate may come down very significantly by that time (2030).

14.2)Towards a Solar Policy

Solar future may be far off for us, if we do not equip ourselves with the right technology at the right time. Easier said than done, but it can be done. This should not, however, mean recruiting non-productive scientists bureaucracy in our R&D institutions and elsewhere, marveling at show case projects. Throwing money at it , does not bring in technology, neither doing nothing and waiting to be supplied packaged technology ,in the rich oil producing Arab countries’ style ,suits us. Private sector would have to be integrated, which is a separate discussion and would be taken up at some other time. It would remain a difficult question as to when to enter into this and how. Although a few things can be done immediately, like introducing solar energy in schools and universities curricula, and augmented by R&D activities in PhD programs should receive immediate priority. That a trained work-force brings down technology induction costs and speeds up the process, would not be lost to anyone.

14.3)The Lessons from Wind?

We may miss the boat for early solar power , if we do not plan for it.. Look at the Wind Power. Despite a forward looking policy, we have only a few MW of wind power installation, although a few projects are at an advance stage of processing, which may mean 100-150 MW of wind power in a few years time. Due to heavy demand of Wind Turbines in the Western markets, no wind power equipment vendor was ready to supply wind turbines to our projects. Long lead times were quoted and not honored. In this atmosphere, obviously prices quoted are high also. Of late things seem to be changing; enthusiasm has shifted to solar energy, and considerable resistance developed against wind power due to noise, birds’ safety and aesthetic issues. Consequently vendors are talking to project sponsors in Pakistan, and hopefully would be offering reduced prices that may not necessarily translate into lower NEPRA tariff for reasons we have been discussing elsewhere. Prices in Pakistan do not come down so easy and automatically!!

14.4)When should we jump in ?

When should we jump in? We are already in it in limited ways , largely on the basis of foreign funded projects , which are also serving as demonstration models for manufacturers as well , and hence the rationale for foreign aid , apart from its philanthropy and ? . Solar PV costs are coming down very fast. Sometimes, in the next five years, solar power may be competitive in off-grid markets, of small and far off villages. For specialized applications such as power supply to communications tower, monitoring stations, pipelines instrumentations, health and education facilities in far off villages , it is already competitive and in demand. In Bangladesh, reportedly, a PV-LED combination has become very popular and successful in villages, where a 20 watts PV –LED power is lighting the lives in rural homes. The rent/tariff, it is said, has been kept as low as their kerosene budget for lighting. Not a bad deal, if that can be replicated here in this country.

14.5)Institutional issues

Even if the real days of Solar Power may be ahead in time, there is to be some home work and an enabling policy in place, to guide investors, businessmen, R&D institutions, vendors etc. For example in what areas and villages government is to priorities solar power. What kind of institutional arrangements are required and may be permitted and supported. In this case company model may not work as well as it does for grid power. Cooperative bodies may have to be promotes and the role and functions of such co-operatives may have to be defined. Electricity Co-operatives have worked successfully in The US in the initial days, and have survived till this day. Electricity Coops are going to be in fashion again through out the world and more so in the developing countries. May be for development purposes a few one-MW solar power plants may be permitted every year, which may require auctioning such opportunities. Local content may have to be mandated.

14.6)In Concrete Terms

Following steps are recommended.

1) a limited number of small commercial-demonstration projects may be approved and installed as IPPs, such as in the following;

1.1) one or two solar PV projects of 5 MW each.

1.2) 10 -20 MW Solar Thermal(Parabolic trough) as ISCC with an existing Steam Turbine or Gas Turbine Combined Cycle Plants in Kot Addu/Muzaffar Garh.

1.3) One or two Solar dish 1 MW projects.

These projects may be auctioned to get lowest offers as solicited projects. The preferential feed-in-tariff would not pose a heavy burden on consumer tariff.

2) In the area of Wind Power,there is already a demonstration project in the form of Zorlu.Several projects are at an advanced stage.Now that we seem to have missed the boat on early wind power, we can afford to wait till a reasonably priced Wind Power regime based on some indeginisation can be brought in.Work on this must be initiated sooner than later.

14)Full disclosure and transparency

14.1)Electrical sector

1. Freedom of information act 2003 must be implemented in letter and spirit in the regulated sector of electricity and industry. A visit to websites of Indian utility and government energy agencies may be useful in learning as to how this aspect can be improved in energy sector in Pakistan.

2. implementation of the following two NEPRA notifications must be expected;

Instead of annual reporting, monthly publishing on the websites of individual entities/companies may be instrumental in resolving many problems. A case in point is the NEPRA determination on KESC’s fuel adjustment charge(FAC) where in two and of four member have distanced themselves from siding with and signing NEPRA determination and have written “notes of dissent”. There is a petition is Sindh High court in this respect as well. Had requisite data , mandated in the two of NEPRA gazette notifications( on generation and distribution performance) been implemented and requisite data made available on monthly basis, the scope of confrontation and confusion could have been lessened if not eliminated altogether.

NEPRA has done well by publishing details of “fuel (adjustment) charges(FAC)”, for the first time in May 2010. Earlier it used to simply announced a figure in a few lines statement. We would encourage NEPRA to continue with this practice and even broaden the scope of such detailed publications in this respect.NEPRA should also publish data or/and require agencies such as PEPCO/CPPA to publish data on “Annual Fixed Cost payments”. Although “reference data” is already published by NEPRA in its determinations, there is a significant discretion and detail in this respect. Scope of such disclosure need to be broadened and extended to include IPPs.

14.2)Oiland Gas sector

Oil and gas sector is worth more than twenty billion US dollar in terms of sales and output. Except for Gas T&D tariff and mere posting of petroleum retail prices and gas wellhead prices, there isn’t much to show by OGRA. The sector is almost totally regulated, theoretically, except LPG where there is confusion as to the regulatory domain. Admittedly OGRA works within the framework of the role assigned to it by Ministry of Petroleum (MPNR) and the GOP. It cannot arrogate powers to itself, although it can build pressure towards higher domain and role for itself. The due process is lacking in the following areas: Surely there are and must be rules in the following areas which in itself is not enough. The actual application and adjudication of those rules is to be the subject of due public process, where price is not determined by the market forces. International transparency moves and initiatives these days even go beyond public tariff and pricing determinations. They are demanding Publish what you pay(PWYP)policies and regime, for it has been found that the actual payments vis-à-vis publically determine tariff may be deviating for legitimate and not so legitimate reasons. Following areas should come under some process of public input and scrutiny through the regulatory process of OGRA and the latter should not restrict to posting of results but invoke the whole regulatory input and process into these.

1) Well-head prices of oil and gas.

2) Ex-refinery prices of petroleum products such as gasoline and diesel, including crude oil imports

3) Oil pipeline tariff

4) PSO imports of petroleum products (50% of the total demand is met through imports valued at around 8 billion dollars)

5) Furnace oil pricing despite claims of being in the open sector; and most importantly

6) High Speed Diesel (HSD) pricing.

On the other hand, what little powers have been granted to OGRA, successive leadership of that organization have not chosen to make use of those. For example who stops OGRA in holding public hearing for discussions on the other constituents of petroleum prices, if the ex-refinery (wholesale or producer price) is made an untouchable tree for it?

15)Energy Development Fund

Pakistan is suffering from an Energy crisis , causing social ,political and economic difficulties.The region is a victim of terrorism furthering and pronouncing the aforementioned problems.Lack of timely investments in the immediate past in the sector has been diagnosed as one of the key issue.It is more than a simple government failure. There are structural problems.Current Electrical Power installed capacity is aroun 23000MW.The demand is expected to double itself every ten years,which meansan additional capacity requrement of 75000 MW in the forhtcoming two decades.Besides eneration capacity, this would entail investments in Transmission, and Distribution.Also investments in primary energy production and transportation utilities

..This may require an investment of 200 billion USD.This can be both a problem as well as an opportunty.This is

one area where Pakistan would need support from friendly countries in terms of foreign equity and project loan investments.A commercially

viable capacity building project is being proposed to facilitate domestic and foreign investment in the energy sector.An Energy Development Fund is proposed,which would not be a ecipe of free lunch .The basic idea,as explained in the forthcoming,is that the proposed fund acts as an

intermediating and facilitatiing instrument and institution.

15.1)Energy technology indigenisation

Indegenisation often suffers from chicken egg syndrome ; indegenisation does not occur because lack of an adequate market, while market does not develop due to lack of indigenous resources. A lot of energy and power equipment is labor intensive, bulky and transport cost sensitive, pavng way for local cost efficiency. Except for turbine-generator, the rest of power plant (about50% of the total) can be locally manufactured with lower costs and higher efficiencies. There is abundant evidence from India and China, where coal power plant and wind power plant are produced at 50% of the price level presenting in OECD countries.Western companies do not even compete when Chinese/Indian suppliers are expected to bid. In automotive sector, vendor industry has been developed largely under tariff protection, which cannot be done in the case of energy sector, where near zero tariff regime exists due to the need of keeping energy prices competitive, if not low enough. in the case of power( equipment) industry, Energy Fund may go a long way towards development of local indeginous industry creating jobs, self-reliance, saving foreign

exchange and reducing costs. Apart from cost reasons, local availability is expected to facilitate speedy project completion and lesser cost escalation risks.

15.2)Risk intermediation

There are a wide variation of risks including country political risk, project location etc. The proposed Fund may offer various mechanisms to mitigate risk or offer to share or fully take up

risk premium as a subordinate lan, output grant etc.

15.3)Green Projects

The Fund may also market credit lines, concessionary or otherwise, dedicated to green projects such as alternate energy, energy conservation, energy efficiency, related BMR, CDM etc.

15.4)Commercial Credit lines and Equity Finance

EDF can also source market, manage or intermediate ordinary debt and equity instruments.

15.5)Project Development

To shorten lead times , project identification studies , preliminary and feasibility studies

and other investigations may be financed on grant or concessionary loans basis.

16)Towards Zero Energy taxation

Petroleum taxation is a major cause of inflation in Pakistan, especially in sensitive prices index. All daily consumption items have to be transported from long distances to retail outlets and daily workers travel to suburbs which are at the city limits requiring major transportation expense. Petroleum taxation and in general all indirect taxation has been guided more by practical reasons of collectability at source or purchase and rather than much economic rationale. A marginal petroleum tax may still be maintained to cover the user charge and financing needs of the transportation sector.

What is zero-energy taxation regime? Simply put this means integrating the energy sector and its taxation; pooling the taxes and subsidies to balance and cancel each other. This would allow withdrawal of electrical subsidies and reduction in petroleum taxation resulting in falling petroleum prices with the rise in Electrical tariff. This may be acceptable and affordable to all parties; lower prices to consumer, no budgetary loss. Above all, it would be sellable to lenders and donors which pose a major constraint in independent economic policy making.

17)Co-operation with India

Trade with India is permitted in many products. Pakistan would tremendously benefit from trade in Power Technology sector. Indian coal and wind power is probably cheapest in the world and it is next door. Tremendous savings of time and cos t can be made through overland transfer and shipment of often very heavy and bulky power equipment.India has installed 11000 MW of Wind Power .The wind turbine price in India is almost half of what it is in Europe and elswhere.Pakistan-specific powwer plants can be built by Indian companies within Indian borders under a power purchase agreement with Pakistan companies under PPIB rules and tariff .Very interesting and economical propositions can be built . A consensus needs to be created in Pakistan among the stake-holders in this respect .This consensus seeking initiative should be launched by the political leadership. There is a bipartisan support to the improvement of trade relationship with India.Former government of President Musharraf also sought raaproachment with India.

Although one would like and prefer to have China in this role.But China is over-comitted on many projects including the hydel ones , and the latter is expanding into Africa.And India is next door.Several companies like HMC,HEC and KSEW may be revitalised under such arrangements. Otherwise many private sector companies may also benefit from such trade and Joint venture beseides cheaper inputs to the power sector.