Breaking
the monopoly: key to the power industry development
01:54
Vietnam needs an electricity power policy under which
the market rules, investors make a profit, and the poor can afford
electricity.
Supply sources
Power plants
in Vietnam belong to different owners. EVN (Electricity of Vietnam) holding
company runs large plants such as Song Da, Son La, Ialy, Tuyen Quang, Tri An
Hydropower and Vinh Tan 4 Thermopower.
The Hoa Binh Hydropower Plant
EVN’s
subsidiaries specializing in producing electricity include GENCO 1, 2, 3, Thu
Duc Thermopower and Thuan Binh Wind Power. Of these, only GENCO 3 has been
equitized, while the remaining companies are single-member limited companies.
Besides EVN,
PetroVietnam, Vinacomin and others also generate electricity. About 2 percent
of electricity consumed is from imports.
The
electricity daily consumption is 0.6 billion kwh, or 220 billion kwh a year.
The electricity generation installed capacity is 0,6 billion kWh/24h = 25
triệu kW (25.000 MW). Son La Hydropower Plant has the capacity of 2,400 MW,
while Hoa Binh 1,920 MW.
However, the
real electricity generation capacity is just a little higher than 50 percent
of the installed capacity. Son La provides 10.2 billion kwh a year, while Hoa
Binh 8.2 billion. Meanwhile, Phu My Thermopower, the largest in the country,
can provide 17 billion kwh.
If Vietnam
wants to increase the electricity output by 10 billion kwh, or 5 percent, a
year, it needs to build one more hydropower plant as the same size as Son La,
or Hoa Binh, or it needs to build one more Phu My every two years.
The current
investment rate is VND25 billion per MW of installed capacity of hydraulic
power and VND50 billion per MW of real generation capacity. The figure would
be higher for thermal power, about $2 million per kwh.
Who will
spend money to build one hydropower plant like Son La every year, which costs
VND60 trillion, or $2.5 billion?
With
electricity generation sources with plentiful owners and short supply, this
is enough for the power generation market to form. GENCO 3 has been
equitized, and GENCO 1, 2 and other companies also need to become joint stock
companies. The plants belonging to EVN Holding also need to be separated into
independent plants, and restructured into joint stock companies, together
with PetroVIetnam and Vinacomin’s plants.
EVN has
stockholder equity of VND200 trillion, which is just enough for 20 percent of
the total electricity demand. It now borrows VND400 trillion, and if the
interest rate is 6 percent per annum, it would have to pay VND24 trillion in
interest a year. And if it paid the principal within 10 years, it would pay
VND40 trillion a year.
Towards a competitive
distribution market
The
distribution is being undertaken by power companies. Two thirds of the
electricity output is reserved for the production sector. However, there is
no big problem with the consumers. The electricity price in Vietnam is
competitive, and enterprises benefit when they use more electricity. There is
no reason to complain about the centralized management.
Problems
only exist in the household-use sector. Consumers complain as they have to
pay more in summer in accordance with the multi-tiered price mechanism. The
Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) designed a single pricing mechanism,
but has withdrawn the solution as it was not applauded.
Consumers
believe that the electricity price is unreasonable because EVN is enjoying a
monopoly in distribution. EVN is a state-owned enterprise which has a lot of
problems characterized for state-owned enterprises.
EVN’s subsidiaries
need to switch to joint stock companies, and especially public companies to
have higher transparency. By that time, many electricity users can be both
clients and shareholders of power supply companies.
Maintaining the transmission
system
Power companies
buy electricity from electricity generation plants and sell electricity to
consumers through the transmission system. The transmission is implemented by
EVNNPT (Vietnam National Power Transmission Corporation), a 100 percent EVN
invested corporation.
If
considering the importance and role of the transmission company, which needs
to ensure electricity security and electricity system safety, EVNNPT is not
going to be equotized.
However,
there should be a reasonable financial mechanism for EVNNPT. It needs to be
given the right to negotiate with every buyer and seller about transmission
prices.
The possibility of equitizing
EVN
The
operation model of EVN is quite cumbersome. It would be better for EVN to be
divided into three large companies in charge of power generation,
transmission and distribution.
If so, the
role of the State would be setting reasonable policies to satisfy the demand
for power and settle problems of social security, but it would not intervene
in electricity pricing. In the future, many power generation plants won’t
belong to EVN.
VNN/Ngo Van Tuyen
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Thứ Ba, 25 tháng 8, 2020
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