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Bidding process to rescue Rs 60,000 crore power plants begins

The bidding process to rescue stranded power projects worth Rs 60,000 crore began on Friday with the companies putting in bids to be technically qualified for getting government's financial support.

New Delhi: The bidding process to rescue stranded power projects worth Rs 60,000 crore began on Friday with the companies putting in bids to be technically qualified for getting government's financial support.

Gas-based power stations, which are either shut for want of fuel or are receiving some domestically produced gas and running at sub-optimal levels, are eligible for government subsidy to help them buy costly imported LNG.

Technical bids closed this evening and the e-auction will be held on Monday, official sources said.

The list of technically qualified bidders will be revealed two hours before the start of bidding on Monday, they said.

As many as 31 power stations with a combined capacity of 14,305 MW which are languishing because of want of gas can bid for support from the Power System Development Fund (PSDF) for generating 30 percent of their installed capacity, called plant load factor, using imported liquefied natural gas (LNG).

Power companies seeking lowest support from PSDF, after considering an electricity tariff of Rs 5.50 per unit, will get the first right over LNG, whose delivered price too will be reduced by asking importer and transporter to take a hair cut in marketing and operational cost.

Under the scheme, LNG will be imported by state-owned GAIL for the stranded gas-based power plants as well as for units receiving domestic gas up to a certain threshold capacity, sources said.

The government will provide as much as Rs 3,500 crore in financial support to the power plants this fiscal and another Rs 4,000 crore in the next, they said.

Currently, out of the 24,150 MW of gas-based power plants, 14,305 MW capacity projects are stranded because of limited availability of domestically produced natural gas and costly imported LNG.

Another 5,500 MW of gas based power plants are operating at less than 30 percent of their installed capacity. These too would be benefited with the new arrangement.

Sources said the e-auction on Monday will be for stranded power plants and the same for units receiving sub-optimal domestic gas will be held on May 12.

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