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Govt to provide subsidy for buying power from Ctg rental plant
- By Super Admin
- Published Monday 22nd 2008
- Good Governance
- Unrated
The
finance secretary, Mohammad Tareq, in a reply to a letter of the power
secretary, M Fouzul Kabir Khan, said the ministry took the decision to
provide the subsidy for electricity purchase, asking the PDB not to buy
power for more than three years.
Earlier on December 5, Fouzul
sent the letter to finance secretary seeking assurance for the subsidy
before the PDB strike a deal with the rental power.
The PDB will
sign an agreement with the Royce Power Engineering of Hong Kong and the
Asian Entech Power Corporation of Bangladesh on December 28 for
purchasing electricity.
The companies became the lowest bidder
offering a tariff rate of 12.8 cents or Tk 8.77 per unit of power from
the furnace-oil-based plant to be installed in joint-venture by six
months.
The cabinet purchase committee, headed by finance adviser
AB Mirza Azizul Islam, at a meeting held recently endorsed the
joint-venture that became the lowest bidder in power tariff rate.
‘The
PDB sought assurance of providing the subsidy as it will incur a loss
of around Tk 21 crore each month by purchasing power from the rental
power plant and it will sell electricity to power agencies for
supplying to consumers at a rate of around Tk 2.41 per unit,’ said an
official of the Power Division.
‘PDB will need around Tk 756
crore as subsidies for purchasing electricity from the rental power
plant. The amount of subsidy could come down if the price of furnace
oil was reduced.
The Finance Ministry asked PDB to send details
of the amount of power it will purchase from the plant and the money
required for the purchase.
The interim government took a decision
to install the furnace-oil-based Shikalbaha rental power plant at
Chittagong due to shortage of gas supply in the port city. The
electricity production cost of fuel-oil-based plant is much higher than
that of the gas-based plants.
As the gas-based power plants of
PDB are struggling with generating power to their capacity due to gas
supply shortage, business people in Chittagong were demanding an
alternative fuel-based power plant in their area.
Source: The New Nation
