No move to privatise state-run power firms: Maha Govt

The agitation by employees of three state-owned power firms was called off, following the government's assurance that the utilities will not be privatised
No move to privatise state-run power firms: Maha Govt
No move to privatise state-run power firms: Maha Govt

Mumbai: Hours after employees of three state-owned power companies in Maharashtra started a three-day strike on Wednesday, the agitation was called off following the government's assurance that the utilities will not be privatised. Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, who also holds the energy portfolio, said that the government had no intention to privatise state-run power utilities.

The decision to call off the strike was announced in the afternoon by Sanjay Thakur, president of the Subordinate Engineers Association, one of the unions participating in the 72-hour-long stir over a host of demands, following a meeting with Fadnavis.

Employees of state-owned entities went on strike

Maharashtra State Electricity Distribution Co Ltd (Mahavitaran), Maharashtra State Electricity Transmission Co Ltd (Mahapareshan) and Maharashtra State Electricity Generation Co Ltd (Mahanirmiti) are the state-owned power firms whose employees had gone on the strike earlier in the day. Fadnavis said that a communication gap between the state government and agitating trade unions led to the stir.

'If a meeting had taken place between the state govt & trade unions earlier, the strike wouldn't have happened'

"If a meeting had taken place between the state government and trade union representatives earlier, the strike wouldn't have happened," Fadnavis said. The deputy chief minister said that the state government doesn't want any state-run company to be privatised.

"One private company (belonging to Adani group) has applied for parallel distribution licence. I want to make it clear that we are not supporting privatisation of these power companies," he said.

Maharashtra Rajya Karmachari, Adhikari and Abhiyanta Sangharsh Samiti, an action committee of 31 unions of power companies, had started an agitation last month over their various demands. Their major demand was not to issue a 'parallel distribution licence' to the Adani Group's power subsidiary as they apprehended grant of the licence would have led to eventual privatisation of state-run power firms.

In November last year, Adani Electricity Navi Mumbai Ltd, a subsidiary of Adani Transmission, had applied to the Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission (MERC) for a parallel licence for power distribution under the jurisdiction of Mahavitaran in Bhandup, Mulund, Thane, Navi Mumbai, Panvel, Taloja and Uran areas.

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