Vietnam Electricity tops country’s
debtor list with $9.7bn in liabilities
Vietnam
Electricity, the country’s power monopoly, has been crowned a ‘champion
title’ it can hardly take pride in – the biggest debtor among all state-run
Vietnamese enterprises.
EVN employees read electricity meters in Hanoi. Tuoi Tre
In
2015 alone, EVN borrowed US$2 billion, pushing the power giant’s government-guaranteed
debt upwards to a staggering $9.7 billion.
EVN
accounts for 37 percent of all government-backed debts for Vietnamese
enterprises, Nguyen Cao Luc, deputy chairman of the Government Office, stated
as he chaired a meeting between government officials and the firm on
Wednesday.
Speaking
on behalf of Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, Luc said EVN should begin
taking measures to cut production costs and boost business effectiveness.
Responding
to the government officials, EVN general director Dang Hoang An said the
utility was able to ensure a reliable power supply during the first half of
this year, despite a record hot spell in the Southeast Asian country.
An
said EVN has been able to cut input costs by VND3 trillion ($132.16 million),
but total operation expenses have increased by VND7.230 trillion ($318.5
million) due to rising coal and gas prices coupled with increasing foreign
exchange rates.
The
general director underlined that EVN is capable of ensuring a power supply
for the rest of the year.
Luc,
the Government Office deputy head, also requested that EVN pay close
attention to ensuring safe operating procedures at the company’s hydropower
plants.
In
late May, seven schoolchildren in the south-central province of Phu Yen were
swimming in a local river when the water level suddenly rose and washed four of them away.
The
incident was caused by a scheduled release of water from the EVN-run Song Ba
Ha Hydropower Plant and the four kids were later confirmed dead.
“[EVN]
should not allow its water release to flood lower ground [like that case in
Phu Yen],” Luc demanded.
“You
cannot simply say that ‘the release is in line with protocols’ when such a
terrible thing happened. Those protocols are problematic. Does EVN have a
solution to fix them?”
The
governmental delegation previously worked with Vinacomin, Vietnam’s largest
coal producer, and heard its cry for help over an unsold inventory of 9.3
million metric tons of coal.
Vinacomin
has attributed the unsold stock to a planned purchase cut of two million tons
from EVN.
At
Wednesday’s meeting with EVN, Luc said the trade ministry and its finance
counterpart should work on a solution for the power utility to keep buying
those two million tons of coal from Vinacomin.
“Buying
Vinacomin’s coal is a way for EVN to help the government meet its economic
growth target,” he explained.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
|
Thứ Năm, 22 tháng 6, 2017
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