<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><root available-locales="en_US," default-locale="en_US"><static-content language-id="en_US"><![CDATA[<p>The control room of the 600-MW Udupi Power Corporation in south Karnataka has a staff of just 20. With the monsoon hitting the Konkan coast, demand for power in the region has fallen sharply. The imported coal-based plant of power and engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) major Lanco Infratech is generating only a little over 400 MW. It has also synchronised its second 600-MW unit, which is expected to start commercial operations once the transmission link is ready by end-2011.<br><br>The fifth floor of Lanco House in Gurgaon is also sparsely populated. The floor that houses the board room and offices of the top management of the company, is lined with waist-high green granite. The off-white walls are peppered with dozens of paintings including M.F. <br><br></p>
<table style="width: 250px;" border="0" cellspacing="10" cellpadding="10" align="right">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td><span style="color: #993300;"><strong>THE LANCO GAME PLAN</strong></span></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<ul>
<li><strong>Join hands with a global company for power equipment manufacture in India</strong></li>
<li><strong>Setting up solar photovoltaic equipment manufacturing</strong></li>
<li><strong>plant in Chhattisgarh with an investment of Rs 1,370 crore</strong></li>
<li><strong>Establish power plants in emerging markets</strong></li>
<li><strong>Acquired Griffin Coal in Australia to ensure fuel security</strong></li>
<li><strong>Wants to establish solar power ventures in Europe</strong></li>
<li><strong>Setting up Lanco Academy to train key employees</strong></li>
</ul>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>Husain's and Souza's. In 2009, Lanco Infratech did a King George V when it moved its corporate office from Hyderabad to Gurgaon. It shifted 700 employees to the Millenium City. Two years later, almost a quarter of Lanco Infratech's 7,000 employees are based in Gurgaon. Being close to the power centre is quite important, even if you are a power utility.<br><br>The Rs 8,000 crore-Lanco is among a clutch of companies that are investing in expanding India's power generation capacity. It has an installed capacity of 3,300 MW and will add another 6,000 MW in the next few years. By 2015, it will invest Rs 35,000 crore to add another 6,000 MW, raising the total capacity to 15,000 MW. By then, Lanco will be present across 20 states and is slated to have 20,000 employees.<br><br>In contrast, in 2005-06, it was a Rs 152-crore construction company with profits of less than Rs 10 crore. In 2010-11, profits are Rs 446 crore. <br><br>Today, Lanco is among the biggest private power companies in India. Rivals include Tata Power (generation capacity 3,120 MW), Reliance Power (1,033 MW), Adani Power (1,980 MW) and Jindal Power (1,000 MW). State-owned NTPC leads with close to 35,000 MW capacity. Lanco, however, believes that for its private sector rivals, power is just another business, while it is focused on the entire power value-chain.<br><br>Can Lanco pull it off over the next four years? It has incurred a net debt of Rs 23,733 crore. Around 85 per cent of the debt is long-term and repayable over 15 years. It is currently setting up eight power plants including at Amarkantak, Anpara, Kondapalli expansion and Vidarbha. <br><br>Barring power, EPC and infrastructure, Lanco has identified two new verticals — solar power and natural resources. Infrastructure includes roads, metro rail and port projects. It also plans to enter power equipment manufacturing to counter the restrictions on import of power equipment, and is identifying an international partner for the venture, as have many others. <br><br>Lanco also plans to enter Bangladesh, Indonesia and West Asia. It has just bagged an EPC order for an Iraqi power plant. It is also looking at projects in Nigeria, Ghana, the Philippines and South Africa. <br><br><strong>Gaining Power</strong><br>Lanco is in a sector where demand will continue to rise for many years. In the 11th Plan period (2007-12), India will add around 55,000 MW capacity. That is more than double the 21,000 MW added in the 10th Plan. At 174 gigawatts (174,631 MW), India has the fifth largest power generation capacity globally — after the US, China, Japan and Russia. This should reach 300 GW by 2017, making it the third-largest power generator globally. The private sector is slated to add 100,000 MW in the 11th and the 12th Plan periods.<br><br>"We are bullish on power," says Lanco Infratech chairman Madhusudan Rao. He agrees that there will be ups and downs, but a country that is growing at 8 per cent needs a sustained increase in its power generation. Despite increase in capacity, India is way behind China that already has 900 GW capacity. In the past six years alone, China added 400 gigawatts.<br><br><img src="/businessworld/system/files/power_capacity_450x279.gif" width="450" height="279" style="vertical-align: middle; margin: 5px;"><br><br>break-page-break<br>The biggest independent power producer, Huaneng Power China, has a capacity of over 54,000 MW. It is one of six such companies in China. Huaneng develops, builds and operates power plants — a model that Lanco, too, has adopted. Unlike other power utilities, Lanco is present across the entire power value-chain — construction, EPC and operating power plants. Says Rao: "You cannot be successful in the infrastructure sector without having a strong construction base. Since we are an integrated company, we have the skills to successfully complete projects on time." It commissioned the Lanco Kondapalli project almost two years before the other companies that had got approvals at the same time. <br><br>But will such big plans of increasing capacity stretch the company? Says J. Suresh Kumar, the company's CFO: "We will fund all the projects from internal accruals. At an appropriate time, we will raise capital by listing the power business. But there is no hurry to do this." He adds that all projects have achieved financial closure and the debt sanctioned will be drawn.<br><br></p>
<table style="width: 550px;" border="3" cellspacing="10" cellpadding="10" align="center">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td style="text-align: center;"><strong>THE LANCO NAME</strong></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><span style="color: #000080;">Lanco started off as a construction company in 1986. In the mid-1990s, as the government opened the power sector to private competition, it entered power.</span><br><br><span style="color: #000080;">The name Lanco is an abbreviated form of Lagadapati Amarappa Naidu and Company. Naidu was the paternal uncle of the Lanco Infratech's top management team. Lanco's running is controlled by three brothers — L. Rajagopal, L. Madhusudan Rao and L. Sridhar — and brother-in-law G. Bhaskara Rao. Though founded by L. Raja-gopal, the company is now being run by Madhusudan Rao and G. Bhaskara Rao. Younger brother Sridhar is in the entertainment business, while Rajagopal quit the management when he became a politician in 2002. He is now a Congress MP from Vijayawada. </span><br><br><span style="color: #000080;">Lanco is moving towards being a professionally-run firm. Family members will exit when they turn 60. Already professionals head various divisions. When Bhaskar retires in four years, Madhusudan may be the only family member involved in Lanco's day-to-day operations.</span></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p><br>A senior executive in a rival power company agrees with that logic but does not think Lanco will be able to meet its 15,000 MW target as it takes 3-4 years to commission a power project. Two other problems that could affect Lanco are getting linkages and ensuring fuel security. It has taken care of the latter to an extent by acquiring the Griffin coal mine in Australia.<br><br><strong>New Ventures, Old Problems</strong><br>In solar power, Lanco aims to be a global player. It already has a corporate office in London and is present in Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Spain and the US. The company's solar expansion plans fit in with the central government's National Solar Mission with a target of 20 GW of solar power generation by 2020. By 2013, India should have 1 GW of solar capacity. Says V. Saibaba, CEO of the solar division: "The future is solar. As solar volumes rise, costs will fall." <br><br>To meet the rising demand for solar power, it is setting up a solar PV cell manufacturing project in Chhattisgarh. The first phase will involve an investment of Rs 1,370 crore. Saibaba says during 2014-19, thermal and solar power production costs will merge. That could see the beginning of a surge in global solar power capacity addition. <br><br>break-page-break<br>Already, there is a case for solar power in the telecom tower business. The 360,000 telecom towers need 3,500 MW of power. While solar power can be provided at Rs 12/KW hour now, diesel costs Rs 13-15/KW hour. As diesel rates rise and solar power rates decline, the balance will shift. It is estimated that in the next few years, solar will be as big as information technology was a decade ago. <br><br>However, unlike IT, many projects in the power sector have failed to take off. That is attributed to high capital expenditure, long gestation period and complicated pricing models. Lanco regularly gets offers from companies looking to exit the business. But the valuation sought in most cases is too high. Naga Prasad Kandimalla, CEO of business development at Lanco Infratech, says: "On an average, we get an opportunity to acquire a power utility every fortnight. But we have not acquired any project." While there are many power projects in the pipeline, Kandimalla foresees a shakeout after 2014. Says CFO Kumar: "Many bidders took a risk on power projects. They were assured that Coal India will meet all linkages. With that not happening, a shake-out is imminent."<br><br>Like most power companies, Lanco's focus is mostly on thermal power. But it has set its eyes on hydel power, too. Says S.K. Mittal, CEO of the company's hydro division: "Hydel power is a risky business. So, while companies have projects worth close to 30,000 MW on the books, work is happening only on 3,000 MW."<br><br></p>
<table style="width: 550px;" border="3" cellspacing="10" cellpadding="10" align="center">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td style="text-align: center;"><strong>FAIR SHARE OF CONTROVERSIES</strong></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="/businessworld/system/files/Venkatesh-Babu_TS_150x150.jpg" width="150" height="150" style="float: right; margin: 5px;"><span style="color: #000080;">Lanco Infratech, which was under the radar for quite some time, has had its fair share of controversies. It came into prominence in 2006, all of a sudden, when it won the bid for the Sasan ultra mega power plant (UMPP) in Madhya Pradesh. The Lanco-Globeleq bid was for Rs 1.19 per unit, the lowest price ever quoted for a thermal power project in India. However, within months, Lanco Infrastructure and Jindal Steel & Power acquired the joint venture partner, Globeleq Singapore. </span><br><br><span style="color: #000080;">As a result, in July 2007, the Empowered Group of Ministers (EGoM) cancelled the Lanco bid as it was alleged to have violated norms by quoting the financial and technical strength of its foreign partner's parent company at the time of bidding. The Sasan UMPP was then allocated to Reliance Energy. It will initially supply power to seven states across north and west India. </span><br><br><span style="color: #000080;">Around the same time, Lanco's managing director, <strong>G. Venkatesh Babu</strong>, was allegedly apprehended at the Hyderabad airport with Rs 36 lakh in cash. Initially it was perceived that the money belonged to Lanco Infratech. The controversy died soon after Babu admitted that the cash was his own and not that of the company. </span><br><br><span style="color: #000080;">However, it does help when Lanco founder L. Rajagopal is a member of Parliament elected on the Congress ticket from Vijayawada. (BW Pic By Tribhuwan Sharma)</span></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p><br>While power capacity can be set up, having the talent to manage it is critical. Though there are enough engineers graduating each year, their quality is questionable. To counter the manpower shortage, Lanco is setting up the Lanco Academy to train employees. It has also devised a formal training process — called LEO (leadership, entrepreneurship and ownership) — to build people capabilities.<br><br>While people issues can be sorted out at the company level, policy and regulatory issues — fuel supply, land acquisition, pollution control, water supply, evacuation of generated power and distribution — require the government's help. <br><br><strong>Troubleshooting</strong><br>The logistics of fuel supply is complicated. Coal in India has a high ash content. So, companies look to import coal, which raises costs. Lanco has recently acquired the Griffin coal mine in Australia, which produces 4 million tonnes annually. This can be ramped up to 15 million tonnes. Acquiring coal mines is critical as India is expected to import 200 million tonnes of coal annually by 2017. <br><br>While fuel can be imported, land and water supply is domestic. Land acquisition is a problem, although land costs form less than 5 per cent of the total cost of a thermal power project. <br><br>Moreover, once power is generated, it needs to be distributed. The poor financial state of the distribution companies in India is a big choke point. As many distributing companies are in the red, power companies are not able to raise tariffs. Second, political compulsions hinder any hike in tariffs — many states, for example, provide free power to farmers. Says Kumar: "It is not as if there is a complete breakdown of the discoms. There are enough state electricity boards (SEBs) willing to buy power at Rs 4-4.5 per unit." Three SEBs — Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh — account for 70 per cent of SEB losses. In Tamil Nadu, power tariffs have fallen over the past 3-4 years. <br><br>Also, at a macro level, while power is a state subject, regulation and policy are central subjects. Says G. Venkatesh Babu, managing director, Lanco Infratech: "While everyone agrees that power brings in development, there is a lot of activism in the sector. Just 10 people can bring a project to a halt." But can a company get into solar, thermal and hydro power together and not feel stretched? Yes, says Kumar, since there are independent management teams with CEOs for each business.<br><br>One thing is for sure. As the demand for power rises, Lanco will be among the few private companies in a position to fulfill the need. There is a powerful case ahead for Lanco. <br><br>anup(dot)jayaram(at)abp(dot)in<br><br>(This story was published in Businessworld Issue Dated 11-07-2011)<br><br></p>