Ahead this year's Lok Sabha elections, achieving full energy access has been one of Modi's key reforms for outreach to rural communities, where BJP is challenged by dissatisfaction and joblessness.
Prime
Minister Narendra
Modi-led central government missed a self-imposed target to
electrify every home, delaying the success of the marquee
$2.3-billion development goal that his party plans to showcase before
national elections early this year.
After
bringing electricity connections to 23.9 million households across 25
states, about 1.05 million homes in four states still lack power, the
government’s Press Information Bureau said in a statement Monday,
the year-end deadline.
Power
Minister R
K Singh reaffirmed as recently as late November that the
government would meet its December 31 target, which had earlier been
moved up by three months.
Achieving
full energy access has been one of Modi’s key reforms amid his
outreach to rural communities, where his Bharatiya Janata Party has
been challenged by dissatisfaction and joblessness. Electrification
success would be a political boon for Modi and the BJP as they face
national elections in the coming months.
The
central government has set several milestones for its rural
electrification plan since Modi came to power in 2014 -- bringing
connections to all villages by May 1, then to all homes by the end
2018. After full electrification is achieved, the next goal will be
to ensure reliable uninterrupted supplies by March 31.
Modi’s
government in September 2017 set out to electrify nearly 40 million
homes, a target that has been shrinking and shifting along the way.
As
of Monday, the total number of homes targeted for electrification
stood at about 25 million, more than one-third fewer than the
original plan. The target was revised downward to account for
families that migrated to cities and households living under one roof
that were grouped together for a common power connection, P.V.
Ramesh, chairman of REC Ltd., which is executing the rural
electrification work, said in early December.
The
deadline was also brought forward from its original March 31. The
government’s statement Monday, which said the states of Assam,
Rajasthan, Meghalaya and Chhattisgarh are still to be electrified,
made no mention of the Dec. 31 target. It also mentioned that the
state of Uttar Pradesh started a campaign to identify any “left
out” households and provide electricity connections.
“Completing
this program in a time-bound manner is a big achievement, but it will
have to be complemented with more reforms at the state utility
level,” Kameswara Rao, who leads power and mining practices at PwC
India, said before the announcement.
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