Pages

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Govt to finalize plan for separate electricity transmission company

The government has decided to finalize details for commencing the registration of a separate Electricity Transmission Company within a week.

"A decision to this connection was taken on Thursday. We will have a concrete plan regarding the registration of the new institution within a week," said Energy Secretary Hari Ram Koirala.

Once established, he disclosed the new institution will handle all transmission related activities, freeing Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) from the transmission function. Koirala disclosed the government´s latest endeavor to expedite power sector reform when he interacted with the businessmen on existing power woes at Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FNCCI).

The private sector has been pushing the government to establish separate agencies to handle production, transmission and distribution of electricity in the country. So far, the NEA has been carrying out all these functions“ "NEA has been inefficient and consumers shouldn´t be the victim," Kush Kumar Joshi, former president of the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FNCCI) said.

Apart from the private sector, development partners such as India, the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank that have been assisting Nepal on the power sector too have been pushing for the structural reforms in the power sector. Their assessment is such reforms were crucial if the government was to end the country´s power woe and efficiently utilize the transmission lines being laid within and across the border.

So far, the World Bank has already extended its assistance for a Nepal-India cross-border transmission line project in a bid facilitate the power trading between the two countries. The government has further requested the Indian government for additional support to develop the second cross-border transmission line.

"Ministry of Energy has already sent a request letter to the Indian government through Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA), seeking support for the second cross-border transmission line," said Koirala.

Koirala also noted that the government was pushing for signing a power trade agreement (PTA) with India at the earliest. "I have talked with Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai in this regard. We might ink the PTA with India with the next six months," Koirala said.

In a bid to tackle the power crisis, the government has also sought Indian assistance of RS 300 million. "I have written a letter to the Indian government seeking financial assistance as the medium-term support for stepping up the power supply," he informed the business community.

He further said that the government was working on to import 70 to 80 MW electricity from Indian in the upcoming fiscal year 2012/13. "So that we could meet the power shortage in industrial sector of eastern part," Koirala said.

Industrialists have been requesting the government to address the power shortage. "We are under pressure to operate factories though the government is not supplying electricity to the industrial sector and slapping double price for diesel bought for industrial purpose," Suraj Vaidya, president of the FNCCI said during the interaction program.

FNCCI requests Thai envoy to support Investment Year

Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FNCCI) has requested Thai Embassy in Kathmandu to help Nepal bring Thai investment in Investment Year 2012/13.

Issuing a press statement on Friday, FNCCI said its president Suraj Baidya on the day met with Thai ambassador Kanthong Unakul and requested the Thai mission to help bring investments from Thailand.

"Vaidya requested the Thai envoy to facilitate Thai investors interested to invest in Nepal through diplomatic channel," the statement said.

Responding to Vaidya, ambassador Unakul said Thai investors might be interested to invest in Nepal´s agriculture, tourism and packaging industry.

The government has announced to celebrate fiscal year 2012/12 as Investment Year hoping to bring foreign investment worth US $ 1 billion.

The statement further added that FNCCI has decided to organize a promotional program in Thailand in the upcoming fiscal year.

Herbs exports from Nepalgunj to resume in 3 days

The Indian government has indicated that exports of medicinal herbs that came to a grinding halt few months back following introduction of a new law by the state-government of Uttar Pradesh (UP), contravening the bilateral trade treaty, will resume in a few days.

Officials at the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu Thursday assured Nepali traders that exports of their consignments will resume within three days, following the government´s diplomatic initiation to resolve the problem.“

"The embassy officials said we would be able to export medicinal herbs worth of Rs 300 million stuck at Nepalgunj customs point two months ago within three day”," Madhukar Thapa, president of the Jadi Buti Association of Nepal (JBAN), told Republica. Exporters on Thursday held a meeting with embassy officials during which request to take immediate steps to prevent their products from decaying was placed.

In this regard, the embassy has asked for a list of names of products so that it can communicate with the concerned agency in the central government and state-government back in India“ "We are pursuing the issue so that exports of medicinal herbs can resume as soon as possible,”one of the embassy officials said preferring anonymity“ "However, it will take a bit longer to change the law that has been imposed by the UP government."

The exports of medicinal herbs from mid- and far-western regions came to a grinding halt after the UP government made it mandatory for Nepali exporters to acquire a license from UP´s Department of Forest to continue exports.

Such a provision was introduced against the spirit of bilateral trade treaty between Nepal and India that ensures free movement of all goods of Indian or Nepali origin in each other´s territory, without subjecting them to any quantitative restrictions, licensing or permit systems.

The exporters had last week met Prime Minister Dr Baburam Bhattarai and asked him to take initiatives to solve the problem.

According to Thapa, 7,000 to 7,500 tons of medicinal herbs are exported from the Nepalgunj customs point to India. "We have been reassured that the medicinal herbs which are now lying at the customs point won´t decay due to the procedural hurdles that were created by the UP government," Thapa said, after the meeting at the embassy.