Sunday, 15 December 2019

1.5 mn power sector employees plan strike on Jan 8 against privatisation

Nearly 1.5 million public sector power employees and engineers will observe a one-day strike on January8, 2020, against the proposed amendment in Electricity Act 2003.

The powermen have alleged the amendment was aimed at facilitating the privatisation of power supply in India by segregating carriage and content.

“The decision to amend Electricity Act 2003 will adversely affect farmers and weaker sections of society. Therefore, the union power ministry should immediately withdraw the move,” All India Power Engineers Federation (AIPEF) chairman Shailendra Dubey said on Sunday.

He claimed electricity employees in all the state power utilities across the country would stage a day-long strike/work boycott on January 8 to oppose the move of the central government to introduce multiple private supply licenses.

The strike/work boycott programme would be held be under the banner of the National Coordination Committee of Electricity Employees and Engineers (NCCOEEE), a broad-based umbrella organisation representing 1.5 million power workers and engineers with the power sector of India.

Earlier, the Federation had already termed the draft amendment to the Electricity Act 2003 as “very dangerous” since it was aimed at benefitting big power companies even as Dubey also criticised the Centre for ‘unilaterally’ going ahead with the proposed amendment.

“The prime motive of the proposed Bill is to create scope of business for private enterprises in power distribution without any investment. The power ministry set aside the objections raised by the states and electricity boards to favour private entities,” he underlined.

According to the Federation, the amendments would be a big jolt to farmers and weaker sections as it would end all subsidies, while it would result in a steep hike in power tariff, thereby making it unaffordable even for the middle class.

Dubey warned the proposed Bill would have far-reaching consequences for both, the state governments and consumers. “It proposes a licensee between transformer and point of consumption. Essentially, it would privatise the supply of electricity. The Bill also takes away the purview of state government and regulator by making it mandatory to implement the national tariff policy. This violates the Constitution of India as electricity is a concurrent subject.”

Meanwhile, private companies would be given separate profitable segments such as the sale of electricity to major industries, commercial establishments, and railways, while moving away from un-remunerative loss-making segments like rural households and agricultural consumers.

The other demands of the power employees include integration of all power utilities in respective states, as had been done in the case of KSEB Limited and HPSEB Limited in Kerala and Himachal Pradesh, respectively, implementation of old-age pension scheme, regularisation of all contract employees and regular recruitment, review of power purchase agreements in interest of common consumers.

Dubey asserted AIPEF would take the people along by apprising them of the dire consequences of the amendments to the Electricity Act.

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