Power Grid Corporation of India
and Tata Power are planning a joint venture to lay a power transmission line
from Bhutan to India.
The 1,786 km transmission line,
costing around Rs.1,200 crore, would travel from Bhutan to New Delhi, en route
Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. Tata Power would own 75 per cent of the equity in the
joint venture that would build and operate the transmission line, while PGCIL
would hold the remainder.
This is the first time that PGCIL
has tied up with a private sector partner for a power transmission line. It
may be mentioned that PGCIL has a transmission network of 40,000 km and carries
40 per cent of the total power generated in India. The company has plans to
increase its network length to 1 lakh km, in the next ten years.
The power transmitted would be sourced from a 1,020 MW
hydel power plant being set up in Bhutan. The plant, to be constructed independently
by Bhutan, is expected to be ready by 2005.
Sourcing power from Bhutan is
favourable to both countries since Bhutan has excess power generating capacity
(mostly hydel), while power shortages are acute in North India, especially
during summer.