PM Modi’s Saubhagya and Ujjwala Schemes Made Positive Impact: CEEW
- More than 32 million rural households benefitted in the last three years since 2015 due to these schemes.
- Most impact on six major energy-access-deprived states, namely Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal.
- However, around 66 million rural households still remain at the bottom of the energy ladder in these six states.
- According to the government as of November 2018, close to 95 per cent of the rural households across India have been electrified.
- The Saubhagya scheme aims to achieve 100 per cent household electrification by March 2019.
- However, for the six major energy-access-deprived states, 91 per cent rural households have connections so far.
- Over the last three years, electricity access has improved in most of the six states.
- W. Bengal continued to perform the best among these states, despite a marginal decline in reliability and quality of electricity supply in the state.
- In 2018, less than 20 per cent rural households in the six states used kerosene as a primary source of lighting, in comparison to over 50 per cent of rural households in 2015.
By Onkareshwar Pandey
New Delhi, Nov. 21, 2018: Saubhagya and Ujjwala Yojana, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s popular schemes targeted for the upliftment of rural women has paid a great dividend. More than 32 million rural households have moved up from the bottom of the energy ladder across six major energy-access-deprived states, namely Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal in the last three years since 2015 due to these schemes. However, around 66 million rural households still remain at the bottom of the energy ladder in these six states. Says Arunabha Ghosh, CEO, CEEW- (the Council on Energy, Environment and Water) in his latest report published today from the second round of India’s largest multidimensional energy access survey.
The recent progress is primarily due to the rapid advances in access to electricity and clean cooking energy for rural households, aided by government schemes including Saubhagya and Ujjwala Yojana. The study released today found that 75 per cent of rural households in these six states relied on grid electricity for their primary lighting needs in 2018, up from 42 per cent in 2015.
Rural households primarily relying on Liquified Petroleum Gas (LPG) for cooking increased to 39 per cent in 2018, up from 15 per cent in 2015. Affordability of clean cooking energy and reliability and quality of electricity supply remain key bottlenecks to achieving universal energy access.
The Access to Clean Cooking Energy and Electricity – Survey of States (ACCESS), an independent CEEW study supported by the Shakti Sustainable Energy Foundation (SSEF) and the National University of Singapore (NUS), covered more than 9,000 households, in 756 villages and 54 districts, across India’s six major energy-access-deprived states. Following up on the first round of the ACCESS survey conducted in 2015, The Council revisited the same households in the six states in mid-2018 to evaluate the changes in their energy access situation over the past three years.
Arunabha Ghosh, CEO, CEEW, said, “Using more than 5 million data points, ACCESS provides a nuanced understanding of the evolution of energy access in rural India. While government schemes such as Saubhagya and Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana have had noticeable impact, policymakers now need to look beyond providing connections to households and turn their attention to ensuring affordable, reliable, and sustainable energy for all. Energy access across rural India must be further improved to improve the standard of living, meet rising aspirations, and fulfil economic potential.”
Abhishek Jain, Senior Programme Lead, CEEW, and lead author of the study, added, “While connections for both electricity as well LPG have massively increased, we also observe a substantial improvement in hours of supply and use of LPG. However, affordability of LPG needs to be addressed to enable sustained use of the clean fuel and reduce indoor air pollution. For electricity, addressing low-voltage issues and improving maintenance services would foster better consumer experience and satisfaction. Further, improving metering rates and strengthening on-ground billing and collection efforts would improve the financial performance of utilities.”
State of electricity access
Over the last three years, electricity access has improved in most of the six states. West Bengal continued to perform the best among these states, despite a marginal decline in reliability and quality of electricity supply in the state.
In 2018, less than 20 per cent rural households in the six states used kerosene as a primary source of lighting, in comparison to over 50 per cent of rural households in 2015. Over the last three years, the median hours of daily electricity supply in the six states together have also increased from 12 to 16 hours. Bihar and Madhya Pradesh especially showed notable improvement as the median value for duration of supply increased from 8 to 15 hours and 12 to 18 hours, respectively. Further, despite the increasing electrification rates under Saubhagya, electrified rural households equipped with meters increased from 53 per cent in 2015 to only 66 per cent in 2018 across the six states. Metering, in particular, requires attention in Jharkhand and Uttar Pradesh.
Although many rural households reported progress in electricity access, several issues remain unresolved. Day-long blackouts and voltage fluctuations, though reduced, were still widely reported. Also, many rural households still reported frequent low voltages that limit appliance use. In most states, rural households that did not have an electricity connection reported high upfront cost as the key deterrent. Given the provision to secure a connection at no up-front cost under the Saubhagya scheme, such perceptions indicate either lack of consumer awareness or implementation gaps at the ground level.
According to the government as of November 2018, close to 95 per cent of the rural households across India have been electrified. The Saubhagya scheme aims to achieve 100 per cent household electrification by March 2019. However, for the six major energy-access-deprived states, 91 per cent rural households have connections so far.