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Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia. Jie Tang Lead Energy Specialist South Asia Region, The World Bank May 31 – June 1, 2013. Rural Electrification. Bangladesh – Solar Home System (SHS) Program for lighting
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Lessons and ExperienceRural Electrification in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia Jie Tang Lead Energy Specialist South Asia Region, The World Bank May 31 – June 1, 2013
Rural Electrification • Bangladesh – Solar Home System (SHS) Program for lighting • Laos and Cambodia – Grid-extension for Rural Electrification
Bangladesh - SHS Installation Rate Celebrated installation of 2 million SHS in early 2013
Bangladesh SHS Program A viable business model for providing SHS for access to electricity for meeting basic lighting needs • Implemented by the Infrastructure Development Company Limited (IDCOL) – Government owned Company • Started in January 2003 with IDA and GEF funds. Target was 50,000 systems by 2008, but achieved by August 2005 • Later on jointed by other donors: including ADB, kfW, GiZ, IDB, GPOBA, and JICA just started • Installation rate now is over 50,000 SHS/month • Next Target - another 2 million by 2015
The Ownership Model Partner Organizations (POs), mostly NGOs install the SHSs under a micro-credit program • Households pay down payment (10-15%) of the system cost net of grant. The rest is paid under micro-finance (2-3 years repayment at interest rate of 12-16% per year) • The micro-finance extended by the POs are refinanced by IDCOL (5-7 years at 6-9% interest rates) allowing POs to install more systems
Provides approval Seeks approval Technical Standards Committee Suppliers Supply Equipment Pay for Equipment Provide grant & loan PO Selection Committee Seeks grant & loan Applies IDCOL Funds IDA and others Grant & soft term credit Select POs Seek operation related solutions PO Sells SHS & provide service Pay down-payment & installment Provides Solutions Operations Committee Household The Ownership Model s
Financing Scheme Figures in US$ for a 50 Wp system • System size ranges from 10 Wp to 120 Wp with shifting preference for smaller systems (30Wp or less) • System prices are in the $8-10/Wp range
Role of IDCOL • PO Selection Committee of IDCOL selects the POs as per eligibility criteria • Technical standards committee of IDCOL develops technical standards for the equipment (panels, batteries, charge controllers) • Inspections by IDCOL inspectors before release of funds to POs • Hotline service for customers. IDCOL does not release payment until customer complaints are addressed by the PO
Transition to “Commercial” Financing • IDCOL refinancing % is being reduced from 80% to 60% • Repayment terms from POs to IDCOL are becoming more “commercial” • For large POs- 9% interest rate, 5 year repayment and a 6-month grace period • For smaller POs- 6% interest rate, 7 year repayment, 1 year grace period
Critical Success Factors • Geographic concentration of rural population • Economies of Scale • A viable business model for providing SHS • Existing network of NGOs • Public acceptance of NGO services • Supervision and Monitoring by IDCOL
Laos – Grid-extension for Rural Electrification Access to Electricity 84% 2013 Population: 6.5 million, about 1.2 million households 15% 1995
Laos – Grid-extension for Rural Electrification A model of public utility-driven grid extension to expand access to electricity • Strong Government commitment and targets for rural electrification • 70% by 2010; 80% by 2015 and 90% by 2020 (set in 2002) • Electricity du Laos (EdL) established strong capacity in implementation of rural electrification • Capacity building since mid 1990s when the Bank started the first rural electrification project • Efficiency in system planning, procurement, installation and commissioning • Comprehensive system loss reduction program to reduce distribution system losses thus cost of services • From about 20% in 2005 to 10% in 2010, along with the fast expansion of the distribution system into rural areas
Laos – Grid-extension for Rural Electrification • Programmatic approach in tariff reform to ensure cost recovery and a profit margin for EdL • Cross-subsidies among consumer categories to ensure (i) affordability of rural housheolds; and (ii) weighted average tariff cover the weighted cost of services • Strong Government support to Electricity du Laos (EdL), a public utility company, to expand access to electricity services • Financial support to EdL when tariff did not cover the cost • Provided strong support of tariff reform toward cost recovery and a profit margin • Concessional terms of loans to EdL for rural electrification projects • Special program for connecting the poor • Power to the Poor: about 20-40% of households in the villages electrified were not connected to the grid since they could not afford the upfront-connection cost (about $80)
Power to the Poor (P2P) – Revolving Fund Targeting the poor1. interest-free credit2. households in village already electrified3. household monthly budget neutral EdL, IDA, GEF Grants $80 EdL Operational Account $2.5 /month EdL P2P Revolving Fund $1.5/m + $2.5/m Monthly bill Electricity payment P2P Repayment Service Contractor for in-house wiring $80 Wiring Poor Households
Power to the Poor (P2P) Pilot • Example: Phosaad Village • Grid to village in 2002 • 270 households in 2008 • 72 not connected over the past 6 years were all connected to the grid in about one month (Feb-Mar 2009) through the P2P • Youtube Video: • Lao PDR: Electricity for All – A Gender Lens • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-DY3T_1RPI&feature=player_embedded
Results of P2P Significant result of the P2P Program • About 25,000 poor households (2% of the population) gained access to grid electricity through the P2P • Increased the overall connection rate in P2P villages from 79% to 96% P2P Program in a gender sensitive approach • About 1,300 female-headed households gained access to grid electricity • Connection rate increased in female-headed households from 67% to 95%
Cambodia – Grid-extension for Rural Electrification A model of expanding access to electricity led by private sector – about the same access rate as Laos in mid 1990s, but now still less than 30% • Private Rural Electrification Enterprises (REEs) have exclusive right in electricity service provision in licensed areas • There are about 180 REEs licensed for rural electrification • About 54% of the population are in REEs’ areas • Very weak technical and financial capacity of REEs, resulting in insufficient investments in generation and distribution, very low efficiency, and very high cost of electricity services • very high tariff, about $0.5-1.0/kWh • very low connection rate, about3-5% in the REEs’ areas
Cambodia – Grid-extension for Rural Electrification • Independent regulator • Managing the licensing of REEs • Regulating REEs’ retail tariff in the principle of “cost plus” • Different tariffs for different REEs • Public power utility company • Generation, transmission , plus distribution services in urban areas • Now is expanding MV network to REEs’ areas for bulk sales – can reduce cost of generation • Not proactive in expanding distribution networks to expand grid coverage • Governance risks • Risks in tariff setting ? • Risks of corruption – REEs are running profitable business
Critical Factors of Success vs no Success • Strong government commitment and support • An efficient model with public utility-driven grid extension • High efficiency in implementation of rural electrification projects due to strong commitment and capacity of EdL • Combination of lowering cost of services and increasing tariff to ensure financial sustainability of electricity services