According to THE World Bank, most power companies in emerging nations lack the necessary infrastructure to handle the rising demand for electricity.
The World Bank stated on Tuesday in a report titled “The Critical Link: Empowering Utilities for the Energy Transition” that the electrical firms lack the resources to expand the amount of renewable energy on the grid.
As per the Bretton Woods organisation, the worldwide energy transition objectives to offer reasonably priced, dependable, and environmentally friendly electricity to everyone would be hindered by the shortage of power.
The World Bank stated that only 40% of electrical companies are able to pay for their debt service and operating expenses, according to TheCable.
“Low-income and lower-middle-income countries face the most acute challenges as high costs, low tariffs, transmission and distribution losses, inefficient payment collection, and poor planning, perpetuate cycles of underperformance, burdening government budgets while leaving many consumers without reliable power.
“These financial and operational hurdles also act as deterrents to investors, preventing many utilities from raising private capital at affordable rates and holding back critical investments in grid modernisation and upgrades.
“The accelerated push to transmit more variable renewable energy, including solar and wind power, coupled with the urgency to provide electricity to nearly 700 million people without electricity access today, will further strain weak utilities’ financial sustainability and test their technical capacity.”
Electric firms will be at the centre of efforts to decarbonise power supply, according to Guangzhe Chen, Vice-President for Infrastructure at the World Bank. These corporations are the guardians of the world’s power systems.
According to Chen, the businesses will also spearhead the transmission of more dependable power, which is essential for enhancing economies, generating employment, and enhancing the quality of life for millions of people.
“Policymakers, regulators and development financiers need to step up to empower utilities through robust policies and more long-term financing to deliver on the promise of clean and accessible energy for all,” he said.
The World Bank claims that opportunities to enhance utility performance are also presented by the goals of universal energy access and the global energy transition.
However according to the international organisation, only efficiently managed and strictly regulated electric utilities would be able to supply reasonably priced, clean power to a growing number of consumers “while earning a reasonable return on investment.”
Governments, according to the World Bank, are best suited to establish the legal framework and transparent procedures for open procurement that reduce investor risk and expedite the development of infrastructure. This allows them to establish sustainable power firms.
“Regulators must ensure that utilities are able to recover reasonable costs through tariffs and encourage investment in efficient, resilient networks,” the World Bank said.
“Even in countries with sound policies and regulations, utilities must improve their billing and metering and embrace better business practices and new technologies to build trust with customers and investors.”
The World Bank stated that because public money is scarce, development financiers—who offer enterprises concessional capital and private utility investors risk mitigation tools—have a critical role to play in mitigating the high cost of the shift.