The power sector reforms of Delhi, the capital of India presents an interesting case in the evolution of power sector reforms in India, targeting improvements in distribution side. The Delhi reform design has benefitted from the experience of an earlier partially successful experiment in the state of Orissa. The reform format has tried many new ideas such as defining Aggregate Technical and Commercial (AT&C) losses, auctioning of Discoms based on highest AT&C loss reduction, direct privatization and transitory support provision. In the span of a little more than a decade from the year 2002, there has been tangible progress on many fronts. Other utilities planning the reforms may benefit from this experience. However, newer challenges such a...
More power to India. The challenge of electricity distribution / Sheoli Pargal and Sudeshna Ghosh Ba...
Ongoing theft, corruption, and an artificially decreased pricing structure have made it nearly impos...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...
The crises of utilities in developing countries led to a World Bank diagnosis of their problems and ...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
When grand institutional reforms based on idealized models are stalled by the poor institutional env...
Power sector policy in India appears to have locked itself into adverse arrangements at least twice ...
In the course of recent years or thereabouts, India has taken quick walks in the improvement of the ...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
The power sector is one of the most important infrastructural aspec ts of the Indian economy. But of...
The need for restructuring the power sector was felt due to the scarcity of financial resources avai...
As the world’s third-biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, India has pledged to achieve net-zero carb...
In early 1990 the power sector in India required an initial set of reforms due to the scarcity of fi...
Using India’s National Sample Survey data on consumption expenditure by households this paper examin...
More power to India. The challenge of electricity distribution / Sheoli Pargal and Sudeshna Ghosh Ba...
Ongoing theft, corruption, and an artificially decreased pricing structure have made it nearly impos...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...
The crises of utilities in developing countries led to a World Bank diagnosis of their problems and ...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
When grand institutional reforms based on idealized models are stalled by the poor institutional env...
Power sector policy in India appears to have locked itself into adverse arrangements at least twice ...
In the course of recent years or thereabouts, India has taken quick walks in the improvement of the ...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
The power sector is one of the most important infrastructural aspec ts of the Indian economy. But of...
The need for restructuring the power sector was felt due to the scarcity of financial resources avai...
As the world’s third-biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, India has pledged to achieve net-zero carb...
In early 1990 the power sector in India required an initial set of reforms due to the scarcity of fi...
Using India’s National Sample Survey data on consumption expenditure by households this paper examin...
More power to India. The challenge of electricity distribution / Sheoli Pargal and Sudeshna Ghosh Ba...
Ongoing theft, corruption, and an artificially decreased pricing structure have made it nearly impos...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...