Nepal, Bangladesh to use Indian grid for power trade

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Staff Reporter :
The secretary level meeting between energy officials of Nepal and Bangladesh agreed to use the existing setup of dedicated transmission line passing through the Siliguri corridor in India to trade electricity in the short run amid talks between the two countries
Nepal’s Energy Secretary Dinesh Ghimire and his Bangladeshi counterpart Ahmad Kaikaus singed the agreement during the Joint Steering Committee meeting in Cox’s Bazaar on Friday. In line with the Memorandum of Understanding signed by the two countries on ‘Cooperation in the Field of Power Sector’ in last August, the authorities have also decided to study the prospect of building dedicated power lines in the long term.
Discussions on the use of Indian transmission lines passing through the Siliguri Corridor, also known as Chicken’s Neck, emerged in the wake of the recent amendments to the cross-border energy trading regulations by India. The southern neighbour has relaxed earlier provisions and given explicit recognition to tripartite arrangements in cross-border electricity trade.
“The Transmission Planning Agency of India in consultation with the Transmission Planning Agency of the neighbouring country shall grant access to the Participating Entities to use Cross Border Transmission Link for cross border trade of electricity,” states India’s Cross Border Trade of Electricity Regulations, 2019.
During past meetings, Nepal and Bangladesh pledged to make their best efforts in devising such trilateral arrangements.
According to an official present in the meeting, the authorities from both countries have also planned to study and invest in 20 major hydropower project proposed in the white paper released by the energy ministry in May 2018.
The proposed projects include four storage and other major hydroelectric power plants such as Upper Arun, Dudhkoshi, Sunkoshi 2, Sunkoshi 3, West Seti and Phukot Karnali.
The estimated annual cumulative output of the proposed and under-study projects stands at 42713.18 GWhr, nearly 12 times Nepal’s current total annual output.
“However, as majority of those projects are either under proposal or under study, the figures might vary in the final detail design,” said the official.
Out of the 20 projects, the Nepal Electricity Authority is currently evaluating the detailed project report of the 800 MW Dudhkoshi Hydropower project and the recent project optimisation of Upper Arun, which revised its installed capacity from 725 MW to 1040 MW.
Bangladesh, one of the fastest growing economies aided by its manufacturing sector, is an energy-hungry nation, which makes it a lucrative market for power produced in Nepal.
To satisfy its power demand, Bangladesh has floated plans to import around 9,000 MW from Nepal over the course of a decade.
And Nepal’s power generation is poised to surge in the next fiscal year as 43 projects with installed capacity of 1149 MW are expected to roar into life.
Given that, the energy ministry has accorded importance to conclude construction of high capacity substations at cross-border trade points and finalise the modalities for developing the 400 kV Butwal-Gorakhpur Transmission Line to facilitate cross border power trade.
The Transmission System Development Plan, unveiled by the ministry in July 2018, has also highlighted the need to have a robust distribution system to evacuate power to energy- starved regions and facilitate electricity export to India and China.
In April 2017, Bangladesh had signed a Memorandum of Understanding with India’s NTPC Vidyut Vyapar Nigam to import 500 MW of electricity from the 900 MW Upper Karnali Scheme being built by Indian developer GMR in Western Nepal.
However, the parties are yet to finalise a power purchase agreement on trading electricity generated by Upper Karnali through the Indian grid.

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