It
is hardly news that state governments in India continue to deny citizens
their basic rights of rehabilitation, or that they continue to flout the
law even after repeated court strictures in this regard, all in return
for dubious promised social benefits. Yet even in this sorry background,
the saga of the Maheshwar Dam project in Madhya Pradesh is discouraging.
Of
the many large dams (as many as 30 in number) in the Narmada Valley, the
Sardar Sarovar has perhaps received the greatest media attention. Yet
the Maheshwar Project, near Mandleshwar in Khargone district, is very
significant in its own way - not least because it was the first privatised
hydel project in India. The promoters of the project are the S. Kumars
group, a group run by the Kasliwal family that originally began in textiles
but has now diversified into power generation, tyre manufacturing, infrastructure
development, financial services and even Information Technology. For this
particular project, the group created a new company - Shree Maheshwar
Hydel Power Corporation Limited (SMHPCL).
The project has been controversial and plagued by various difficulties
from the start. Since 1997, when work on the project first began, local
people who would be dispossessed, displaced or deprived of livelihood
by the project, have been involved in protests against the project. The
affected people, including peasants, fisherpeople, boatspeople and agricultural
workers of the area, have resisted the project because their legitimate
demands for adequate compensation and rehabilitation have thus far been
denied. The popular protests and the inability or unwillingness of the
promoters to meet any of the demands in turn created such conditions that
successive external partner companies – US-based multinational Bechtel
in 1997, the German companies Bayernwerk and VEW Energie in 1999, the
US power company Ogden in 2000 - have left the project.
Then there were barriers created by the often problematic financial activities
of the main promoters. Between 1998 and 2000, two S. Kumar group companies
- Induj Enertech Limited (the holding company for SMHPCL) and Modak Rubber
and Textiles Limited (along with several other companies – 42 in all)
were sanctioned loans by the Madhya Pradesh State Industrial Development
Corporation in the form of ICDs (Inter-Corporate Deposits) without any
proper application, documentation, scrutiny, and securities. The outstanding
debt for these 42 companies is now more than Rs. 800 crores. Default on
these loans, which were improperly received in the first place, led the
state government of Madhya Pradesh to file an FIR and initiate criminal
proceedings against the promoters of the Maheshwar project.
Work on the project was suspended from 2001 to 2005, as the project properties
were attached due to default and the public financial institutions also
stopped providing finance for it. However, in September 2005 the Madhya
Pradesh state government waived the condition of grant of security by
handing over shares of SMHPCL of Rs. 30 crores against the settlement
of outstanding loan of Rs. 103 crores. In addition, the returnable amount
was reduced from Rs. 103 crores to Rs. 77 crores and the rate of interest
was brought down from 14 per cent to 8 per cent. Amazingly, no explanation
has been provided as to why all these concessions are being given to a
private party and declared wilful defaulter, at the cost of the public
exchequer.
But all this enabled the work on the Maheshwar project to be resumed in
2006, with SMHPCL once again seeking large loans and equity participation
from public financing institutions, even in excess of the amount permitted
under the law. And so once again the affected people are on the streets,
to stop a project that is seen to be flawed on technical, social and financial
grounds.
The proposed 42 km. long Maheshwar reservoir will submerge both a rich
land economy as well as a rich river economy. As per the Ministry of Environment
and Forests clearance given to the SMHPCL in 2001, the dam will submerge
over 8000 families in 61 villages in the area partially or fully. This
is in addition to the 5000 landless Kewat, Kahar and Dalit families who
will lose their entire livelihoods of sand quarrying, fishing, etc. if
the dam is built, even if their homes may escape being submerged in the
project. It also excludes the large number of people who may be additionally
affected by large scale water-logging expected in the adjoining area.
The R&R of the project is governed by the Rehabilitation Policy of
the Madhya Pradesh government, as well as the conditions of the environmental
clearance of the MoEF. Both of these require that the affected people
be settled with agricultural land in the lieu of agricultural land that
they are losing, and that only in very exceptional cases that can an oustee
receive cash compensation. Yet, till today, not a single affected family
has been given agricultural land. Further, the MoEF itself has noted that
there is no rehabilitation plan at all for the affected people. In a letter
sent in early June to the state government, the MoEF has even directed
that work on the project be stopped until a plan with details of proposed
housing units, agricultural lands identified/required/developed, the implementation
schedule of R&R, etc., is worked out and made available.
But the more urgent question relates to the perceived social gains of
this particular project. In particular, most independent studies come
to the conclusion that the power produced by this project will be far
less than promised as well as prohibitively expensive, so the proposed
gains are largely illusory.
Some of this is because of technical reasons. The Maheshwar Project site
is at a point in the river where there is no river gorge and where river
flows through the plains. Because it is situated in the plains of the
Narmada valley with a low rim, there is a technical and design bar to
higher production of power. Because of this, nearly 80 per cent of the
power will be produced during the four monsoon months, and for the rest
of the year the Project will produce an average of only 1.5 hours a day.
Thus, although the Maheshwar Project has an installed capacity of 400MW,
it will have a firm power production of only 92 MW initially and 49 MW
finally, since the actual extent of firm power in a hydel project is based
on the available water flows and is typically only a fraction of the proposed
installed capacity. That is why in periods of drought, hydel power does
not suffice because of inadequate flows, and this is borne out by the
performance of other hydel projects in Madhya Pradesh in recent years.
The delays in the project have cause the estimated project outlay to go
up from Rs. 465 crores in 1994 to around Rs.2233 crores today. Yet Power
Purchase Agreement with the MP State Electricity Board has a ''deemed
generation'' clause, requiring compulsory payments at deemed generation
levels, irrespective of actual production and provides for guaranteed
rates of return on equity ranging from 16 per cent to 32 per cent for
35 years. This combined with the massively increased outlay, significantly
increases the cost of power from this project.
As a result, the likely power tariff has gone up enormously. Based on
the tariff formula in the Power Purchase Agreement, it may be conservatively
estimated that the average cost of power from the Maheshwar Project will
be around Rs. 3.5 to 4 per kWh at bus bar, and the cost of peaking power
will be much higher. (This compares with the cost of the power produced
at bus bar by the State Electricity Board today at Rs. 1.25 per kWh for
thermal and Rs. 0.25 per kWh for hydel, and the cost of the NTPC produced
power at Rs. 1.67 per kWh.)
Clearly, the cost of Maheshwar power will be prohibitively expensive,
with the potential to ruin the MP State Electricity Board. All the signs
exist of another Enron-type fiasco in the making, this time with the added
devastation produced by large scale displacement and completely inadequate
rehabilitation.
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