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Nepal's energy emergency


DEWAN RAI


KUNDA DIXIT
BLUE POWER: The Kulekhani reservoir, Nepal's only big storage project so far.

Whichever government comes to power, the first thing it will have to start working on will be energy.

In any other country, this would be considered an emergency: Nepal is going through its first-ever monsoon power cuts. This winter load-shedding will go up to 56 hours a week. The generation shortfall will be 35 per cent below demand this December.

Not just this year, Nepal will suffer an average of to 6-8 hours of power cuts a day till 2013 because no new major power generation schemes are coming on line till then except the 70MW Middle Marsyangdi.

The other emergency is Nepal's widening balance of payments gap with India, which reached Rs 96 billion this year because of the higher cost of petroleum imports and falling export. The trade imbalance is expected to grow, and the only way to narrow the gap in the medium term is by launching hydroelectricity export projects immediately.

There will be other benefits from aggressive investments in hydro infrastructure: it will generate tens of thousands of jobs. In their economic masterplan, the Maoists say they want to generate 10,000 megawatts in the next 10 years to meet domestic demand and to export to India. This would require investments at a time when most international companies are wary of doing business in Nepal because of political risk.

Nepal's electricity demand is rising at 10 per cent a year, but could increase if the peace dividend finally spurs economic growth. Domestic investors and community generation schemes could easily add up to 50MW a year. Industry analysts see a role for large foreign joint ventures in projects to export power to India.

They point to the Electricity Act of 1992 that allowed 300MW of power to be generated in six years in the mid-1990s, doubling generation capacity, and say Nepal's new government needs to make a similar breakthrough.

"Ten year ago, no one even wanted to hear about investment in hydropower but now we have investors lining up to put money into this sector," says Gyanendra Lal Pradhan of Butwal Power Company, one of Nepal's new breed of entrepreneurs with stakes in seven hydro projects worth 350MW in pipeline.

"It's simple demand and supply," Pradhan adds, "demand is growing so we need to add supply. But we have to be fast, if we start today we may be able to bring load shedding down to zero in seven years, otherwise this shortage will last till 2016."

The time is right for new investments in hydropower to meet domestic shortfalls and to export to India. The Maoists have expressed a strong commitment to develop the sector, but investors are still wary.

Earlier this year, the government issued licenses to two Indian companies for big budget projects: Arun III (402MW) and Upper Karnali (300MW), both dedicated export projects.

On Monday, the World Bank's soft loan division, the International Finance Corporation announced in Kathmandu that would be financing 25 per cent of the cost of both projects.

The government is re-inviting bids for a storage project on the Budi Gandaki, and a slew of new projects are coming on line that will generate 150MW in the next two years.

The earliest any of the export projects will start selling power to India will be 2015, and that is if work starts right away. The 750MW Australia-Nepal export joint venture West Seti project has been delayed by 10 years and will take another 10 years to be completed.

SN Power is exploring the Upper Tama Kosi II and III (500MW), while NEA, with public shares, is starting Upper Tama Kosi I next year to be completed by 2013.

Some, like Ajaya Dixit of Nepal Water Conservation Foundation, say that Nepal should concentrate on fulfilling domestic demand and promoting value-added industries first before expending time and money on export projects which have long gestation.

"Rather than just sell electricity, it would be better to generate downstream benefits from using electricity," he says, "electricity can be the primary mover of socio-economic progress in Nepal."

Others say meeting domestic demand should go hand-in-hand with exports to India to balance the trade gap. Says Balaram Pradhan of the Nepal Hydropower Association: "We have to produce enough energy for domestic economic growth, but we also need to export electricity to bridge the trade gap."


1. Manas, Morang
After Congress parity's victory on no confidence in Indian Parliament, our hudro resourse has less value as bargaining chip then before. We could have made this resource as a dependent aspect of Indian foriegn policy. When Indian start to invest its capital to develop it neuclear power. Our water resource which he considered a white gold will disappear. It is time for us to invite multi national company especially for the West to invest and ask them to find compatative market. We nee power ful group that not only develop the resource but help us to protect us from powerful neighbor. Kuwait National soverignty would have gone long if it has not made super power a place to make money. We must invite other party in the playing field as soon as possible so we still have some form of superiority over powerful neighbor. If India start electrify north Indain with it proposed twelve nuclear power, our water resource limited to small hudo project.

2. jange, new nepal
Not many people interested in what is supposed to be an emergency. Makes you wonder if it is really an emergency or just hype.

3. lego, e-mail
When will Mahat [unlike his name.. pygmy as arthamantri] will reduce custom duty in elrctric vehicles etc, ? Ghatta ma gham lagepachhi matra .Car agents have great say in finance ministry. Henry Ford changed American life standard as he made car at everyones disposal, as essential tool for work. Not luxury ones.

4. Desbhakata, Berlin
maosits dont want to develop nepal, they are just what RAW is instructing to them. so dewan ji do beleive and overview what RAW strstrgies there before observe the menifasto of Maoists. No big invester will come to Nepal simply because equivocal political conditions put by maoist. remember, some days before what dil gurung was telling " they will adopt thier own economic polices" what is the meaning of this slogan??? so many, even small invester are also scaring from that ... sentence. so there is no possibility of inflow of inverstment in nepal untill and unless communist are reamain in Power. Even some water mafia are actively already engage to discourage the power investment, these groups were actively involved to thrash the Arun-III. again the international gang backed by India arjun karki and siwakaoti will play the vilen role aganist the nepali hydropower development path of Nepal. be careful from these types of Sovereignty Broker........

5. Patric hage brown, london, london
Desbhakat You are almost right. To take development path we should have specific long term economic vision. Only this type of vision will give proper perspective for the natural resource endowment country like Nepal. Nexus between political scenario and the economic development is always in limo in Nepalese case. UML has no vision and even they don't have cream manpower too to analyze and formulate long term hydropower policy rather they can block the incoming foreign investment, like they block the Arun-III that was really praiseworthy big-push in Nepal' development. The long term policy of Maoists are to formulae the communism and socialism that means nationalization all the individual properties. They want to become a supervisor is talk but not in reality, the few weeks ago DEV gurungs version was also came in this line. Communist can talk many days without thinking future and support. If communist did not behaved in that way, we would have many projects in Nepal. Moreover it is not easy to invest in communist lead government, it is already proved from other nation from Russia to communism province of India. So Maoist can destroy any thing but they can not do a single thing for Nepal. From political point of view NC is reliable, it has international repute but the corruption is its bad aspect. These all are interlinked each other among political parties' ego and ground base.

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