Kumari Palany & Co

Tamil Nadu State would be power surplus in the next six months: CM

Posted on: 17/Dec/2013 1:02:00 PM
Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa while replying to member of the 14th Finance Commission Sudipto Mundle at its meeting here Monday asserted that the state would be power surplus in the next six months even as she alleged that the Centre was "deliberately delaying" certain clearances for state government-initiated power projects. 
 
She while speaking said, “We have initiated a number of new power projects which could have got started, could have got commissioned but clearances are deliberately being delayed by the Central Government.There were many areas where the state government has got only limited powers and clearances have to be given by the central government which were being denied.
 
Mundle had raised the question of power situation about the gap between demand and supply in Tamil Nadu.
 
To this, J Jayalalithaa replied, “I assure you that in another six months or so, Tamil Nadu will be totally free of power cuts, it will be a power surplus state. There were no power cuts in the state between July and October this year. We had successfully bridged the entire gap between demand and supply in two and a half years. There is a power deficit and that power deficit arises because of certain flaws which have crept in Central Generating Stations and I must say it is very odd that all these have taken place at the same time, simultaneously. There was a perennial power shortage in Tamil Nadu from 2007 onwards, particularly, in 2008, 2009 and 2010 and up to May 2011 when a different government was administering the state.
 
Referring to a project, which was commissioned during her second tenure as Chief Minister, she said a central clearance was needed just to take a transmission cable through about 14 km of forest land.This had to be given by the Environment and Forests Ministry. "It was deliberately delayed for political reasons. We kept on reminding the Centre. I even wrote several times to the Prime Minister, but there was no response," she said.
 
Eventually she approached the Supreme Court, which gave a direction to the central government and later the permission was accorded.