Tamil Nadu Power Sector Faces Financial Hurdles Despite National Profitability
Tamil Nadu Power Sector Faces Financial Hurdles Despite National Profitability

The year 2024-25 marked a significant milestone for India's state-owned power distribution sector, which turned profitable on an aggregate basis after more than a decade. This achievement, though routine in a healthy business environment, underscores the long-standing challenges in the country's electricity distribution system. While the sector has improved nationally, Tamil Nadu's energy utilities still have considerable ground to cover before achieving financial sustainability.

Tamil Nadu's Energy Sector: A Critical Economic Driver

Tamil Nadu is one of India's most industrialized and urbanized states, with the energy sector serving as a key economic driver. Manufacturing and technology-driven service sectors are energy-intensive, making it imperative for the state's power sector to be operationally efficient, financially self-sufficient, and environmentally sustainable.

Unbundling of TANGEDCO: A Long-Overdue Move

For a long time, Tamil Nadu was the only large state that had not unbundled its generation and distribution functions. Given that these are fundamentally different businesses with distinct operating and financial models, the move was long overdue. On April 1, 2024, TANGEDCO was unbundled into three entities:

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  • TNPDCL: Handling the power distribution business
  • TNPGCL: Handling thermal power generation
  • TNGECL: Handling renewable energy operations

The unbundling is the first step towards making the energy sector more efficient. The creation of a dedicated renewable energy company is a positive move and has already resulted in several significant initiatives, with the entity turning profitable in its first year of operations. The Tamil Nadu Renewable Energy Land Portal is another important initiative aimed at bringing stakeholders onto a single platform and bridging gaps in the solar power ecosystem.

Legacy Issues Persist in Thermal Generation and Distribution

However, legacy issues continue to plague the thermal generation and distribution sectors. The opening balance sheets of these companies reflected a significant negative net worth arising from years of inefficient operations and under-recovery of costs. The gap between the Average Cost of Supply (ACS) and the Average Revenue Realisation (ARR) is reported at 0.12 per kWh. However, if the loss compensation grant of 16,076 crore (representing 75% of the operational loss) received from the state government is excluded, the gap widens sharply to 1.52 per kWh. The total comprehensive income for 2024-25 reflected a loss of over 4,000 crore even after accounting for the loss compensation grant.

The combined negative net worth of the unbundled entity, TANGEDCO, stood at 1.46 lakh crore as of April 1, 2024, while total debt exceeded 1.80 lakh crore. The regulator had disallowed nearly 55,000 crore of debt in earlier tariff orders on the grounds that it did not pertain to asset acquisition. Much of this debt was contracted to fund losses arising from delays in tariff revisions. It is therefore imperative to restructure the debt and write off a portion of the accumulated losses.

Key Steps to Rejuvenate the Energy Sector

Improving Operational Performance

Reduce the ACS-ARR gap from the current level of 1.52 per kWh (computed without taking into account the loss funding from the Government of Tamil Nadu).

Ensuring Financial Viability

Operations continue to incur losses despite substantial financial support from the government.

Accelerating RDSS Implementation

The Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme (RDSS) must be implemented at a faster pace to fully realise the benefits of distribution reforms.

Restructuring Loans

The current level of debt in the energy sector is clearly unsustainable. The required debt reduction is estimated at 55,000-60,000 crore. This debt could be transferred to a special purpose vehicle (SPV), which can issue long-dated government-guaranteed bonds to existing lenders. The government can service the interest obligations, while the energy utilities can gradually repay the principal over time. Such a move would also help reduce TNPDCL's interest burden, which currently stands at around 10,000 crore annually.

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Conclusion

The unbundling of generation and distribution is only the first step in reforming the sector. This must be followed by financial restructuring and improvements in operational efficiency to ensure that the sector is capable of supporting the state's economic growth and meeting its long-term development targets.