The Reliance-Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group (R-Adag) has consolidated its entire power generation business under one roof. Reliance Infrastructure Ltd (R-Infra) has transferred 433MW of gas-based power generation assets to group company Reliance Power Ltd (R-Power) for Rs1,095 crore. At one stroke, this deal makes R-Power a company with an operating income and positions R-Infra as a focused utilities firm. R-Infra holds 45% equity stake in R-Power and is its largest shareholder.
Now, R-Power—at 35,000MW, has the largest development portfolio in the power sector, but wasn’t producing a single watt of electricity till last quarter—will have more than 1,000MW power generation capacity, with 433MW coming from the three newly-transferred plants and 600MW from its newly operationalized Rosa I plant in Uttar Pradesh.
Secondly, this transfer adds gas-fired power plants to its kitty right away, even as it struggles with land acquisition and feedstock issues for its 7480MW gas-based power plant in Dadri, Uttar Pradesh.
“The intent all along was to club power generating plants in one company. Moreover these plants were small earlier, now they have clear expansion plans,” said a senior R-Infra executive, who did not want to be named, and declined to specify the quantum of capacity expansion that was being planned. “Reliance Power has the resources and they will do it.”Sector analysts are saying there could be more benefits to this than merely stacking power generation assets in one firm within R-Adag.
Jagannadham Thunuguntla, head of equities at SMC Capitals Ltd in New Delhi, said that these assets may have been transferred into R-Power to enable the company to have greater cash flow from operations, since its power projects have long gestation periods and will not start before 2013-14.
“The interest of both the companies are aligned to the extent that Reliance Infrastructure holds majority stake in Reliance Power, and after the transfer of assets Reliance Infrastructure can concentrate more on its infrastructure business,” said Thunuguntla.
R-Adag and RIL are in talks to seal a gas supply renegotiation, in accordance with a Supreme Court verdict earlier this month that had ruled—ending four years of legal battles—that the two groups should renegotiate in keeping with government regulations.
A statement issued by the group on Friday stated that three power plants—a 220MW capacity at Samalkot (Andhra Pradesh), a 157MW one at Kochi (Kerala) and 48MW plant at Zuarinagar (Goa)—“has been agreed to be transferred by Reliance Infrastructure to Reliance Power to bring entire power generation portfolio under one roof”.
Both Andhra Pradesh and Kerala plants are in 15-year power purchase agreements with AP Transco and Kerala State Electricity Board, respectively, while Zuarinagar has been supplying power to the government of Goa as well as various industrial consumers.
The statement further states that the total transfer value of the three assets has been pegged at Rs1,095 crore, based on an “independent valuation” done be audit and consulting firm KPMG. The share capital of the subsidiary companies of R-Infra that hold these assets and the the power plants themselves would be transferred to R-Power after obtaining requisite approvals, it said.
By acquiring R-Infra’s power plants, R-Power’s immediate generation capacity would inch closer to that of its private sector competitor Essar Power’s gas-based power generation capacity of 1,220MW and would be one-fourth of the present gas-based power generation capacity of 3,995MW of state-run NTPC Ltd.
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