lessons and experience rural electrification in bangladesh, laos and cambodia

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Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia 1 Jie Tang Lead Energy Specialist South Asia Region, The World Bank May 31 – June 1, 2013

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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 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Lessons and ExperienceRural Electrification

in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

1

Jie TangLead Energy Specialist

South Asia Region, The World BankMay 31 – June 1, 2013

Page 2: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Rural Electrification

• Bangladesh – Solar Home System (SHS) Program for lighting

• Laos and Cambodia – Grid-extension for Rural Electrification

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Page 3: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Bangladesh - SHS Installation Rate

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Celebrated installation of 2 million SHS in early 2013

Page 4: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 5: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 6: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

   s

        

Supply Equipment

Pay for Equipment

Seeks grant & loan

Provide grant & loan IDCOL Funds

Technical Standards Committe

e Suppliers Seeks approval

Provides approval

Household

Sells SHS &

provide service

Pay down-payment & installment

Operations Committee

Seek opera

tion

relate

d solutio

ns

Provides

Solutions

POPO Selection Committee Select

POs

Applies

IDA and others

Grant & soft

term credit

The Ownership Model

Page 7: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Financing Scheme

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(a) Solar Home System Cost 400

(b) Buy-down Grant from IDCOL (for all size) 25

(c) Cost net of Grant (b-a) 375

(d) Household Down payment [15% of (c)] 56

(e) Credit to customers (c-d) 319

Loan Tenor 2-3 years

Interest Payment 12-16%

Monthly Installment Payment 8.5

(f) Refinancing from IDCOL to PO [80% of (e)] 255

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

Page 8: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 9: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Phased Reduction of Grant

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Item

Amount of Grant Available per SHS

Total Buy-down grant

Institutional Development Grant

First 20,000 SHS $90 $70 $20

Next 20,000 SHS $70 $55 $15

Next 35,000 SHS $50 $40 $10

Next 88,160 SHS €38 €30 €8

Next 35,000 SHS €36 €30 €6

Next 235,000 SHS €34 €30 €4

Next 100,000 SHS €28 €25 €3

Currently $25 $22 $3

Page 10: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 11: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 12: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Thanks!

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Page 13: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Laos – Grid-extension for Rural Electrification

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15%

1995

84%

2013

Access to Electricity

Population: 6.5 million, about 1.2 million households

Page 14: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 15: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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)

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Page 16: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Targeting the poor1. interest-free credit2. households in village already electrified3. household monthly budget neutral EdL, IDA,

GEF Grants

EdL P2P Revolving Fund

EdL P2P Revolving Fund

EdL Operational Account

Service Contractor for

in-house wiring

Service Contractor for

in-house wiring

Monthly bill

P2P Repayment

Electricity payment

Poor Households

$80

$80

+ $2.5/m

Power to the Poor (P2P) – Revolving Fund

Wiring

$1.5/m

$2.5 /month

Page 17: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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 Lenshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-DY3T_1RPI&feature=player_embedded

Page 18: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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%

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Page 19: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 20: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 21: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

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

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Page 22: Lessons and Experience Rural Electrification  in Bangladesh, Laos and Cambodia

Thanks!

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