Optimal pricing and investment in the electricity sector in Tamil Nadu, India | | Posted on:2002-06-27 | Degree:Ph.D | Type:Dissertation | | University:Vanderbilt University | Candidate:Murthy, Ranganath Srinivas | Full Text:PDF | | GTID:1469390011999008 | Subject:Economics | | Abstract/Summary: | PDF Full Text Request | | Faulty pricing policies and inadequate investment in the power sector are responsible for the chronic power shortages that plague Tamil Nadu and the rest of India.; Formulae for optimal pricing rules are derived for a social welfare maximizing Electricity Board which sells electricity that is used both as an intermediate, and as a final good. Because of distributional constraints, the optimal prices deviate systematically from marginal costs. Optimal relative price-marginal cost differentials are computed for Tamil Nadu, and are found to indicate a lower degree of subsidization than the prevailing prices. The rationalization of electricity tariffs would very likely increase the Board's revenues.; The cost-effectiveness of nuclear power in India is examined by comparing actual data for the Madras Atomic Power Project and the Singrauli coal-fired thermal power station. The conventional (non-environmental) costs of power generation are compared at both market prices and shadow prices, calculated according to the UNIDO guidelines for project evaluation. Despite favorable assumptions for the costs of the nuclear plant, coal had a decided edge over nuclear in Tamil Nadu. Remarkably, the edge varied little when market prices are replaced by shadow prices in the computations. With regard to the environmental costs, far too much remains unknown. More research is therefore needed on the environmental impacts of both types of power generation before a final choice can be made. | | Keywords/Search Tags: | Power, Tamil nadu, Pricing, Optimal, Electricity | PDF Full Text Request | Related items |
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