ADVERTISEMENT

Sembcorp Says India Payment Delays Raising Developer Costs

Payment delays are prohibiting tariff reductions, CEO says 

Sembcorp Says India Payment Delays Raising Developer Costs
A motorcyclist rides near a sub-station and electricity transmission pylons operated by Maharashtra State Electricity Distribution Co. (MSEDCL) in Nandurbar district, Maharashtra, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Sembcorp Industries Ltd. said recurring payment delays by Indian electricity retailers are piling on costs to operators and are bad for the renewable power business it wants to build.

Payment delays risk “affecting development of the sector,” Sembcorp India Chief Executive Officer Vipul Tuli said in an interview in New Delhi. The local unit of the Singaporean conglomerate, which last month won an auction to supply wind power in India, already has $4 billion of energy assets in the country.

Indian risks have made Semborp “conservative with investments in renewables,” Tuli said. Payment "delays of 6-12 months are common” which tacks on about 8 percent of additional costs, he said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s green-power ambitions are at risk as state-run power retailers are not able to buy enough power and have run behind on payments to domestic and overseas clean-energy companies. Their debts run to several hundred million dollars.

Payment delays have prevented operators from passing on the declining cost of generating renewable power to consumers, according to Tuli. Sembcorp’s Indian unit, Green Infra Wind Energy Ltd., was one of five winners at a Feb. 24 auction that drove wind power prices to a record low 3.46 rupees (5 U.S. cents) a kilowatt-hour.

With bigger projects coming up for bidding, Sembcorp could end up adding more capacities annually, Tuli said.

Investments Needed

If renewable energy operators get payments, the industry will be able to lower tariffs, Tuli said. Otherwise, tariffs will remain higher because companies need to factor in higher receivables over longer periods of time, he said.

India is the largest contributor to Sembcorp’s global power portfolio with 900 megawatts of renewables and 2.6 gigawatts of coal. The company wants to maintain its mix of thermal and clean power in India and aims for more than a quarter of generation to be renewable, Tuli said. Sembcorp also owns power projects in Singapore, China, Vietnam and the Middle East.

Ten-year average returns across all energy sectors -- coal, renewables, oil and gas -- are below the cost of capital, which is making it difficult to add new capacity in a sector that needs massive new investments, according to Tuli. Returns on average for the industry are 2-3 percentage points below the cost of capital, he said.

"A year ago we would have looked at adding about 250 megawatts of renewables to our portfolio every year but now it would be about 150 megawatts," he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Anindya Upadhyay in New Delhi at aupadhyay22@bloomberg.net, Rajesh Kumar Singh in New Delhi at rsingh133@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net, Jonathan Tirone