Electricity pricing formula breaches Supreme Court ruling
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Search This Blog
Saturday, April 27, 2013
The CEB Is More Than Patali Vs Pavithra: The Anatomy Of The Electricity Crisis
What is evident is almost lifeless insensitivity to the impact of the rate increases on millions of households. The indifference to the broader impact on the economy affecting production and export competitiveness might be shocking but not surprising. The Public Utilities Commission would seem to be trying hard to pull the plug on CEB’s finances after letting it have its tariff increases. The public spat over internal auditing at CEB is a red herring given the more fundamental questions at stake.
At his breakfast briefing to media heads, the President has reportedly described the increase in electricity rates as “a temporary measure taken to recover the losses incurred” by the CEB. He has also indicated that when the second and third phases of the Norochcholai coal power plant are completed by December this year, it would “be possible for the government to systematically remove the fuel adjustment charges added to the rate increase.”
Expert opinion and informed understanding present a different picture. The CEB’s financial problems are structural and its losses cannot be reversed by temporary measures. Fuel surcharges, as has been forcefully reminded by Dr. Tilak Siyambalapitiya, were introduced intermittently in the 1970s and 1980s and have now become a permanent factor in pricing so much so that it would be misleading to describe them as a “temporary measure.”
As for Norochcholai, it is proving to be another Chinese infrastructure albatross around the government’s neck with operational and maintenance headaches from the time it was switched on. It is far from being the intended cost-reducing boon to national power supply. A former Vice Chairman of the CEB, Eng. WDAS Wijayapala, has pointed out that accelerating the plant’s Phase 1 completion was part of the reason for its current problems, and has pertinently questioned the wisdom of accelerating the remaining Phases 2 & 3.
Patali vs Pavithra
Incredibly, a special cabinet meeting on the matter requested by Vasudeva Nanayakkara was not granted by the President. For the second time in as many months the cabinet has not been allowed to discuss matters of vital importance brought up by individual ministers. Before Nanayakkara, the presidential rebuff landed on Justice Minister Rauf Hakeem who had pleaded in vain for a special cabinet meeting after the ethno-religious attack on the Fashion Bug business in Pepiliyana. Nonetheless, the two ministers – though over 20 years apart in age – have become equally adept at ministerial survival notwithstanding the professed principles of the former and the agonizing moral dilemmas of the latter. Neither seems to be taken seriously by the President although the real reason for avoiding a cabinet meeting on the CEB crisis would have been to prevent a nasty clash between the former and the present holders of the Power and Energy Ministry.
The newly minted Minister of Power and Energy, Pavithradevi Wanniarachchi, after going incommunicado for days reappeared in parliament to sing her own song and disown the tariff hike proposal. She pleaded that the tariff hike is her predecessor Patali Champika Ranawaka’s baby and she is carrying it as a result of the recent cabinet reshuffle. Never mind Keuneman’s old wisecrack that there is no point reshuffling a pack that has no aces but only jokers, but we know that the good Minister was carried upstairs in the reshuffle as a payoff for her loyal gender support in the fraudulent impeachment of CJ Shirani Bandaranyake. The fair Minister may, in all fairness, be over her head in matters electrical but having accepted a difficult portfolio she cannot now complain that she did not know that her job description included taking responsibility for CEB’s tariff proposals to the PUC.
Champika Ranawaka, the former Minister, is not one who needs a special invitation to get into a political fight. Deprived of a cabinet clash, Mr. Ranawaka is reported to have gone ‘parliamentary’ distributing a letter to members of parliament contradicting Minister Wanniarachchi’s version and insisting that he has consistently opposed the idea of electricity price hike which according to the former minister is the brain child of the much maligned Finance Secretary. Mr. Ranawaka reiterated his belief in a progressive tariff system – those who consume less should pay less. And, wearing his engineering hat, he also expressed his puzzlement at the timing of the price hike – when the reservoirs are full and hydro-power can be generated to full capacity reducing the dependence on the oil-expensive thermal power.
Mr. Ranawake is an interesting political phenomenon. Young, trained in Electrical Engineering, and possessing plenty of political smarts and communication skills, he could have done much inclusive political good to himself and the country. Unfortunately and like quite a few others of his generation, during the tumultuous second coming of the JVP in the late 1980s, he first went sideways with the JVP’s anti-Indianism and then fell backward through the ethno-religious civilizational ring of exclusionary politics before finding his feet in the fundamentalist quagmire of the JHU.
Although as Minister of Power and Energy Mr. Ranawaka knew his electrical onions very well, he let his rhetoric surpass his achievements in an obviously difficult portfolio. At a Vienna conference in 2010, he laid out his vision for the CEB – to contribute to national development without being an economic burden by eliminating waste, increasing efficiency, reducing generation costs, and bringing in additional revenues. Mission accomplished is the message in his impressive website after the cabinet reshuffle: “After spectacular performance as Minister of Power and Energy, having curbed corruption and curtailed mismanagement at the CEB and related institutions, Minister Patali Chamika Ranawaka (has) assumed duties as Minister of Technology Research and Atomic Energy on January 31.” Even more over the top is this grandiloquent claim made on June 11, 2011 and quoted in a March 2013 internet news report: “It is with great pleasure I say that there is no financial crisis in the CEB. The power plants that will be constructed according to our plans will ensure that the people in this country can live without darkness until 2020.”
Whichever way the Patali-Pavithra battle – and it would be a totally unequal match-up – unfolds is not going to make a difference to the hapless public who are stuck with the hiked prices for the foreseeable future. But the battle should shed at least some light, given Mr. Ranawaka’s technical background, along with the usual heat of infighting, in regard to a complex portfolio of which the present government has no clue as to where to start, let alone how to end.
The anatomy of the crisis
In sharp contrast the government’s cluelessness there have been plenty of expert contributions in the media providing a good understanding of the problem and its solution. I have already referred to two such contributors, but without understanding and decision making at the cabinet level nothing is going to change. It is fair to summarize power generation and pricing as two sides of the CEB’s same crisis coin. While the costs of transmission and distribution (the so called ‘wires and supply’ costs) are somewhat controllable, it is the cost of generation that is impossible to wrestle down to keep the total cost below the approved unit price of electricity. The cost-price shortfall multiplied across millions of consumers and accumulated year after year is the fundamental reason for the CEB’s financial crisis. And there is no short-term fix to it.
The crisis is complicated by different sources of electricity and their respective generation costs. From what used to be 100% dependence on hydro-power in the 1970s the generation composition has been drastically transformed. The population and the universe of consumers have also doubled over the last forty years. The proportion of hydro power has shrunk to be under 50% and thermal power generation now accounts for more than 50%. And the rub is in the high proportion of oil-based power generation and the high costs that go with it. The oil-based power generation is required even more in drought years when the hydro-power contribution could fall considerably well below the installed capacity. Drought and hot weather also push up the demand for electricity by the increased use of fans and air conditioners. 2011 was a drought year when the hydro-power contribution fell to nearly 50% of installed capacity and drove the dependence on oil even higher.
The alternative to relying on oil is the development of cheaper coal-based thermal power plants, Norochcholai Phase 1 being the first such plant. The expectations are that the completion of Norochcholai Phases 2 & 3 and the completion of another coal-based thermal power-plant in Sampur, will diversify electricity generation to roughly about a third each of hydro, oil-based, and coal-based plants. These changes should reduce the high dependence on oil and associated costs and help achieve some balance between the unit cost and price of electricity. At the same time, there should not be any illusion that oil-based plants could totally be eliminated. All three traditional sources of energy along with renewable sources will be necessary to achieve a sustainable energy supply.
A commonly cited reason for the current crisis is the delay in the implementation of projects in a timely manner. Project planning can now benefit from available rainfall data for over hundred years and oil price trends over forty years and provide for anticipating and dealing with drought years as well as oil price fluctuations. But measures identified to deal with contingencies should be implemented according to target dates established in long term planning.
The Norochcholai project was delayed because of public protests on account of concerns over social and natural environmental impacts. However, such delays could be avoided by identifying adverse impacts and addressing them forthrightly and transparently to the satisfaction of the local communities where projects are located. The question now is whether the Norochcholai Phses 1 & 2 will be completed in 2014 and whether the Sampur power plant will be completed in 2017 as planned. Otherwise, industry experts are predicting a major crisis in the generation and pricing of electricity. While Norochcholai was gifted to the Chinese, the Sampur plant is being kept open for the Indians. But experts are warning that Sampur cannot be kept indefinitely waiting until India is satisfied with the terms of the undertaking.
The pricing side of the crisis calls for a systematic, consistent and transparent approach instead of ad hoc tariff hikes. Users will ultimately have to pay but there should be equity, fairness and affordability in the prices set for different categories of users. There should not be ‘tariff holidays’ for anyone except, if at all, those at the very bottom of the economic pyramid and charity organizations. However, under a provision of the Electricity Act, fourteen private companies have been exempted from electricity-user charges by extraordinary gazette notification. Among them are a garment manufacturer, cement and sugar factories, an Agency House, one hotel and a number of property developers. Why this special treatment to select businesses who can easily afford to pay when poor households are called upon to pay at an unfair rate?
Only in #lka
See more of Jayasekara's comments on Twitter in our earlier post:
Self-immolation of 70m Tamils brings a smile to SL's face (20 September 2012)
Consul General of Sri Lanka in New South Wales and Queensland, Australia - Bandula Jayasekara:
Canada 'appalled' at Sri Lanka hosting Commonwealth meeting - @millerC4 reports for #C4news
http://www.channel4.com/news/sri-lanka-commonwealth-human-rights-queen …
@Channel4News @millerC4 Ohh The Channel of the Terrorists Channel Tigers is at it again and the country which harbours terrorists groups
Jayasekara was the Consul General of Sri Lanka in Toronto, Canada in 2009.
See the following video for Jayasekara's remarks on the Washington Post and Amnesty International expressing grave concerns about the detainment of Tamils in 'IDP camps', and here for remarks on the Channel 4 documentary 'Sri Lanka's Killing Fields'.
Self-immolation of 70m Tamils brings a smile to SL's face (20 September 2012)
Canada 'appalled' at Sri Lanka Commonwealth meeting
The Canadian foreign minister tells Channel 4 News he is "appalled" the Commonwealth heads of government meeting will still take place in Sri Lanka despite concerns over human rights in the country.-26 APRIL 2013
Canada's foreign minister John Baird said it was "not a good day for the Commonwealth" that its secretariat was going ahead with plans to host the heads of government meeting (CHOGM) in Sri Lanka in November.
Sri Lanka will also take on the chairmanship of the Commonwealth after the summit - amid mounting concerns that some of the Commonwealth's key democratic values are being ignored in the country.
Alleged war crimes committed at the end of Sri Lanka's three-decade long civil war, which ended when the government crushed the Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009, have never been properly investigated and attempts at reconciliation since then have effectively failed amid an ongoing atmosphere of government repression.
We are appalled that Sri Lanka is going to be hosting this summit.Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird
Mr Baird, speaking in London after a meeting of Commonwealth foreign ministers, told Channel 4 News: "We are appalled that Sri Lanka is going to be hosting this summit.
"The Canadian prime minister has been very clear that unless we saw progress on accountability, on reconciliation, and some sort of change on the growing authoritarian trend we've seen in the country, that he wouldn't attend the summit."
However, at this point Canada is the only Commonwealth country taking such a strong position on Sri Lanka. At a press conference earlier, the Commonwealth Secretary General Kamalesh Sharma, a former Indian diplomat, confirmed that the meeting in Sri Lanka was still going ahead.
He added: "All member states subscribe to the same principles and values equally. Interacting with them [Sri Lanka] on many fronts as I have been doing at all levels, I am fully persuaded that they are sincere in subscribing to and following those values [of democracy and protection for human rights]."
Will the Queen attend?
The Queen is also due to attend the meeting in Sri Lanka as head of the Commonwealth. Prime Minister David Cameron is also on the list, but the British government has as yet made no decision about a possible boycott in protest at the situation in Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka's record on human rights has been questioned at the highest level across the international community, with particular focus on abuses committed at the end of its civil war in 2009. The UN has twice voted to urge the country to properly and transparently investigate killings and disappearances from the period.
Recent events such as the impeachment of the country's chief justice, reports of torture of Tamils deported from the UK, and the shooting of a journalist have only heightened concerns. The government denies all allegations of abuses.
Earlier this year, former foreign secretary David Miliband described the idea of the Queen visiting Sri Lanka for CHOGM as "grotesque".
However, speaking today in London, Australian foreign minister Bob Carr said he hoped that engaging with Sri Lanka would allow the Commonwealth to check how much progress the country was actually making on human rights.
"It's a view that many of us hold that in the lead up to CHOGM, this Commonwealth with its adherence to democratic values is in a good position to engage with the government of Sri Lanka and monitor progress," he said.
But Canada's foreign minister John Baird said there was no sign that this had made any difference so far - and referred to fears that the Commonwealth position on Sri Lanka was making the body look increasingly irrelevant in the modern world.
"We had hoped that the leader's summit being in Colombo at the end of this year would see progress on accountability for the war crimes that took place at the end of the war, that it would mean some meaningful effort at reconciliation with the Tamil population, and that we would see improvements in good governance and respect for human rights.
"Regrettably, we haven't seen any of these three - and in fact they've gotten worse...It's obviously not a good day for the Commonwealth."-26 APRIL 2013
Friday, April 26, 2013
Scarred By Sri Lankan Torture
By Michael Gordon -
”Kumar’s” scars are real and are only just beginning to heal – the result, he maintains, of four gruesome days of torture in a dark room, somewhere outside Colombo, barely two weeks ago.
To the Tamil Refugee Council in Australia, the scars are proof that those suspected of supporting the defeated Tamil Tigers are still being persecuted in their homeland.
To the Sri Lankan government, they are a ”fabrication” designed to undermine confidence in a reconciled nation and give succour to those ”defeated terrorists” still seeking a separate Tamil state.
What seems beyond question is that Kumar, not his real name, was un-scarred when he left Melbourne in March to return to Sri Lanka to run the restaurant of a hospitalised uncle – and very badly scarred when he returned on April 11.
Kumar admits he accepted money to carry some parcels for the Tamil Tigers while working as a bus driver in Sri Lanka in 2006. He says he left the country two years later and entered Australia on a student visa before completing a course in cooking and being granted a 457 visa in January last year.
Twice, he says, he returned to Sri Lanka to visit family before his wife and three children were able to join him. Each time, he says, he kept a low profile, staying in the family home, and had no trouble.
This time, he suspects he was spotted by Sri Lankan intelligence officers while working front-of-house in his uncle’s restaurant.
He was riding home from the restaurant on a motor bike with his brother when they were intercepted. Kumar says he was bound, blindfolded and driven to a room and tortured for four days.
Early on, he says he saw a stove in a blood-spattered room, discarded women’s underwear and an iron bar in a bucket. The ordeal reached its climax on the fourth day, when he says his back was beaten with the scalding bar.
”They wanted me to admit that I’m a LTTE [Tamil Tiger] and I said, ‘No. How can I admit? I just delivered some parcels for some money’,” Kumar told Fairfax.
”On the last day I begged them not to kill me, [saying] ‘I’ve got family, I’ve got kids’. They showed me a blank sheet of paper and wanted me to sign.” He claims that 30 minutes after signing the paper, he was released by a roadside.
Now he is seeking asylum, saying he fears that his back injuries will prevent him returning to work at a suburban Indian restaurant – and leave him liable to deportation.
Sri Lankan high commissioner Thisara Samarasinghe said the story is ”exactly a fabrication for vested interest … if he has reasonable and admissible evidence, bring it up to the authorities and be assured [they] will treat it with absolute seriousness”.
Greens leader Christine Milne called on the federal government and Coalition to stand up to Sri Lanka ”end the cosiness of the relationship” with the country.
”Justice and decency demand Australia stands up to what has become a democratically elected dictatorship engaged in abuse of its people, particularly the Tamils,” she said in a statement on Thursday.
Senator Milne said there was increasing evidence of torture, persecution and human rights abuses in Sri Lanka.
”It is clear that instead of recognising that Tamils are leaving Sri Lanka to seek asylum because of ongoing persecution and white van disappearances, the Gillard government and Tony Abbott prefer to demonise the victims and not condemn the perpetrators.”
Scarred by Sri Lankan torture
RANIL WANTS INTERNATIONAL OBSERVERS FOR POLLS IN NORTH
April 25, 2013
“There has to be a group of international and Commonwealth election observers at the elections. They need to be deployed from the day the nominations would be closed,” Ranil Wickremesinghe, UNP leader told reporters today in Jaffna.
Wickremesinghe also called for the removal of the present Northern Province governor, G A Chandrasiri, a retired military officer.
“The governor has to be a civilian acceptable to everyone”, the Opposition Leader was quoted as saying by PTI.
The northern provincial council election would be the first ever in the north since the advent of the provincial councils in 1987, part of India’s intervention to try and resolve the separatist conflict raging in the island at the time.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa this week said the conditions were right to hold the elections in the north.
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam
April 26, 2013
HonourableSamuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam
QC. MPChelvanayakam’s 27th Death Anniversary
by C. V. Vivekananthan, Attorney-at-law ; published April 27, 2004
Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam departed this life on the 27th day of April 1977, two decades and seven years ago.
He was born in Malaysia on 31st March 1898, one century and six years ago. He received his secondary education at the Union College, Tellippalai and later became a student at St. Thomas College, which was at that time situated at Modera. He was a contemporary of S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike.
[ வெள்ளிக்கிழமை, 26 ஏப்ரல் 2013, 08:05.22 AM GMT ]
இன்று காலை 9.00 மணிக்கு தென்னிந்திய திருச்சபையின் முன்னாள் பேராயர் ஜெபநேசன் தலைமையில் தந்தை செல்வா சதுக்கத்தில் இந்நிகழ்வு நடைபெற்றது.
இந்த நிகழ்வில், தந்தை செல்வாவின் உருவச் சிலைக்கு மலர் மாலை அணிவிக்கப்பட்டு அஞ்சலி செலுத்தப்பட்டுள்ளது.
இந்த நிகழ்வில் அமைச்சர் ரவூப் ஹக்கீம், நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர் சிறிதரன், இந்திய துணைத்தூதுவர் வே.மகாலிங்கம் எனப் பலரும் கலந்துகொண்டனர்.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


