The power - steel feud blazes up
furiously
VietNamNet Bridge
– Every time when the Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) plans to raise the retail
electricity price, the war between the power generator and steel mills
escalates.
The history of the war
In August 2010, EVN made a public
apology for the serious electricity shortage which seriously badly affected
the production and business. At the same time, EVN sent a letter to the Prime
Minister, complaining that the electricity shortage was mainly because of the
high consumption level of the steel mills which used backward technologies,
and the overly hot investment in the steel industry.
EVN then complained that the
implementation of new steel projects led to the sharp increase in the power
demand and damaged the electricity production plans in localities. EVN, for
example, had to change the power development plan in Ba Ria – Vung Tau 7
times just because of too many steel projects.
According to EVN, by August 30, 2009,
As a result, EVN had to make a heavy
investment of VND35.5 trillion to develop power generation units,
transmission lines. But it then had to sell power to steel mills at meager
prices.
In response, steel mills said the
number of steel projects provided by EVN only existed on… paper, because a
lot of projects had not become operational. Therefore, it was unreasonable to
conclude that steel mills were wasteful in using electricity.
In June 2011, the Ministry of Finance
“threw more oil into the fire” when proposing the government to impose the 3
percent tax on steel imports, saying that steel mills made fat profit because
they only had to pay low for the electricity.
At that time, the electricity should
have been sold at VND1,777 per kwh for EVN to break even, while steel mills
had to pay VND1,242 only.
Steel mills argued that the expenses
on electricity only accounted for 5.14 percent of the production cost of
ingot steel, and 0,77 percent of structural steel. Therefore, the profits
made by steel mills did not come from the low power prices.
Finally, steel mills escaped from the
high taxation. However, EVN never gives up.
Tense escalates
In 2012, EVN, in a report, accused
steel mills of consuming too much electricity. The steel mills in the first
quarter of 2012 consumed 1,264 billion kwh, or 5.53 percent of the electricity
merchandise. If the same consumption level continued in the other three
quarters of the year, the steel industry may consume up to 5 billion khw in
2012.
But steel mills argued that the
figure was unreliable. Since many steel mills had to shut down or suspend
their production because of the difficulties; the volume of consumed
electricity must be much lower.
In early 2013, EVN once again warned
about the electricity outage, requesting big electricity consumers such as
cement and steel mills to save power.
The power – steel war has escalated
to a new level when the Ministry of Industry and Trade, when drafting the
electricity pricing mechanism, decided that cement and steel manufacturers
have to bear the prices higher by 2-16 percent than other consumers.
Steel mills have accused the watchdog
agency of applying the discriminatory treatment--an unreasonable thing in a
market economy.
Meanwhile, people believe that even
if cement and steel manufacturers don’t consume too much electricity, the
electricity shortage would still occur in
Tran Thuy
|
Thứ Tư, 17 tháng 7, 2013
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