78113 Republic of Bulgaria Power Sector Rapid Assessment May 27, 2013 The World Bank Europe and Central Asia Region Foreword This note has been prepared by the World Bank in response to a request by the Government of Bulgaria in March 2013 to conduct an assessment of the issues and challenges in the Bulgarian power sector in the wake of the crisis in January 2013. This note is intended to help inform the Government's deliberations on how to improve public confidence and trust in the governance of the power sector, enhance the sector’s financial standing, and provide adequate support to poor households so that they can afford environmentally sustainable and reliable electricity service. This assessment has been undertaken by the World Bank within a very short period of time based on data provided by the Ministry of Economy, Energy and Tourism (MEET), the State Water and Energy Regulatory Commission (SWERC), the National Statistical Institute (NSI), and the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy (MLSP). This rapid assessment is not a substitute for more detailed analysis that will inform and guide specific implementation steps and sector reforms. The World Bank will be available to continue the policy discussion on the findings of this assessment and the suggested package of reforms with the Government to develop and support a viable program of reforms that will help achieve reliable, efficient, and affordable electricity and heating services for the citizens of Bulgaria. 2 Synopsis of Diagnosis and Recommendations  Public has lost confidence and trust in the management of energy companies and the Government’s oversight of the electricity sector. Common believe that some State officials and enterprise managers have investments in the energy sector has compromised public trust. Bulgarian Energy Holding (BEH) is an unnecessary level of State oversight.  Sector has large financial deficits that are increasing contingent liabilities on the State. High cost structure stemming from flat energy demand, poorly regulated growth in renewables, misuse of incentives for cogeneration, long-term contracts, and inefficient trade/export incentives.  Declining level and coverage of social assistance benefits have made energy unaffordable for the poor. Budget contribution for targeted social safety net programs is a third of levels in 2003.  Comprehensive package of actions needed to improve public confidence, financial viability and affordability:  Enhance credibility, independence, and capacity of energy regulator.  Eliminate incentives that lead to inefficient investments and rent-seeking behaviour.  Address financial liabilities that arise from the off-take of renewable energy, co-generation, long-term power purchase agreements, and failed investments in an equitable manner.  Increase budgetary funding to expand level and scope of targeted social assistance benefits for vulnerable consumers.  Eliminate conflicts of interest of state officials and senior managers in having personal/family financial interests in the power sector. 3 Note Structure I. Public distrust II. Unsustainable cost structure III. Affordability IV. Future directions 4 I. Public distrust 5 Serious structural issues in the sector contributed to a political crisis Public Distrust Governance  Perception of deep rooted corruption  Governance of State Owned Enterprises Unsustainable  Undermined regulatory framework Affordability cost structure  High cost generation mix  Inadequate social protection  Inefficient operation of the system  High and inefficient  Poorly regulated growth in electricity consumption renewables Unless these issues are comprehensively addressed, service delivery will 6 worsen and threaten economic stability Consumers are frustrated by tariff hikes and the lack of transparency in the sector Electricity market performance (MPI): second lowest scoring country in the EU  Lowest scores for “trusting the provider� (to respect laws and regulations protecting consumers) and “live up to what you wanted� (the service consumers want is actually being delivered) The Market Performance Indicator (MPI) is a composite index based on the results of survey which information on consumer markets in terms of comparability, trust, consumer problems and complaints, expectations, choice and switching. 7 Source: European Commission Overall, high perception of corruption Bulgaria is the lowest scoring country in the EU area after Greece in terms of the Corruption Perception Index (CPI) for 2012 100 90 80 70 CPI score 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 A country or territory’s score indicates the perceived level of public sector corruption on a scale of 0 - 100, where 0 means that a country is perceived as highly corrupt and 100 means it is CPI (2012) perceived as very clean. Source: Transparency International 8 Consumers upset over billing practices  Consumers are not sure what they are being charged for  Bills do not make essential information understandable  Past consumption is not explained  Billing cycles are irregular 9 State governance of the sector is convoluted  State Ownership through Holding Company BEH compromises transparent and professional management of the energy enterprises  State assets are being priced inefficiently. For example, some hydroelectricity priced artificially low to accommodate high priced renewables  Growing Government liabilities hidden making it difficult to assess impact on the State Budget 10 Constraints to transition to EU-compatible electricity market  Large generation capacity share of “must-run� plants makes the system inflexible for a competitive, more efficient electricity market  Incentives grossly distorted:  Co-generators sell power at preferential power prices and buy back cheaper power for their own use  Large cross-subsidies from electricity to heat  Renewable incentive framework and growth poorly designed and regulated  Allocation of power generation quotas for the regulated market driven by social considerations  Key market mechanisms not in place:  No balancing market  No power exchange A competitive, more efficient market can be achieved but needs a fundamental re-think on market transition 11 Current market structure a good platform to facilitate market transition  Well disaggregated sector - although transmission separation to be completed  The single buyer NEK can transition to a balancing market and power exchange  Active cross-border trade with neighbouring countries will help the transition Generation Transmission Distribution Purchased and Paid for by NEK under Energy Law Renewable Energy Power Plants Distribution Entities collect on behalf of NEK (under Feed in Tariffs) CEZ 15% Regulated Prices through Annual Tariff Purchased and Paid for by NEK under PPAs Coal Independent 15% Power Producers EVN Orders NEK Purchased and Paid for by NEK under Energy Law (Single Buyer, Aggregator, Hydropower Generator, Supplier of Last Resort & Transmission Company) State-owned Energy Suppliers (nuclear, coal, Energo Pro gas) ~1% ~58% System High-Voltage Purchased and Paid for by NEK under Law Operator Customers (owned by NEK; Cogeneration organizes the balancing Market) Suppliers Renewable and Efficient ~12% of Energy Subsidiaries of BEH 12 Energy Regulator: lack of independence and capacity  Regulatory independence is insufficient  In the last 6 months there have been two changes of the Chairman of the Regulator (SWERC)  Decision to decrease prices was pre-announced by the State officials and followed a change in the Energy Law allowing price decreases  Regulator is blamed but unable to make the necessary political decisions to correct problems in the electricity sector  Some regulatory decisions are unpredictable and not fully explained or supported by transparent information  SEWRC has insufficient technical, financial capability to fulfil its duties  Number of staff (128) is small considering scope of activities covering electricity, gas and water  There are about 15 experts covering the electricity sector  The budget is insufficient and 2nd lowest per employee in Europe; it is part of the central budget and not ring-fenced  Lack of key regulatory building blocks  No accounting standards framework for regulated utilities  No cost benchmarking of regulated utilities e.g. generation, transmission, and distribution  Allocation of quotas for the regulated market not based on efficiency principles 13 II. Unsustainable cost structure 14 Factors contributing to financial unsustainability 1. Adequate power capacity for domestic use, but administrative constraints to exporting surplus power 2. Inefficient allocation of power generation quotas for the regulated market and distortions in operational dispatch of power plants 3. Rapid build-up of renewable energy at high feed-in tariffs 4. High preferential tariffs paid to “cogeneration� plants imposed by law 5. Cost of long-term Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) 6. Mismanagement of contingent liabilities in the sector 15 Adequate supply for exports  Even with rising demand for electricity, Bulgaria will continue to have a supply surplus to maintain energy security and facilitate exports Solar Generation mix (2013-2030) 70 Wind TWh 60 Hydro 50 Factory Power Plants CoGen 40 Thermal 30 Nuclear 20 Domestic Demand: 25% price increase 10 Exports fall by 5% 0 Exports fall by 10% Source: Generation mix projections MEET, alternative demand scenarios calculated by ECA 16 Exports declined but not dramatically Export- historic volumes (quarterly data) 4 TR 3.5 RS 3 RO MK 2.5 GR GWh 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013  Exports to Western Balkans and Greece have fallen over the past two years due to economic downturn. Turkey is now an important off-take market, but its increase has not fully offset fall in other countries  Additional constraints to exports include:  Access to electricity priced at competitive “Power costs from Bulgaria are levels for the regional market too high. I’m better off selling  High transmission fees power from Hungary to Turkey�  Limited grid capacity for export … Power trader 17 System not dispatched at least cost due to “must-run� plants Supply curve* (least–average cost) Supply curve (with must-run plants) * Nuclear do not include costs for decommissioning of existing plants, long-term fuel storage, nor externality costs  Simplified supply curve on the left stacks generation options by least average cost order.  Without “must-run� plant constraints, average load could be covered mainly by the operation of Kozloduy, Maritza 2, HPP, Varna, Bodov Dol and Maritza 3.  The curve on the right shows must-run plants (RES, PPAs and DH) stacked first in order from the left. Lower cost plants (nuclear, thermal and hydro) are hardly dispatched.  This illustrates the impact of the must-run constraints; it is expensive for the system and consumers. 18 Long Term Power Purchase Agreements, Cogeneration and Renewables are a large share of the electricity output Generation Structure in 2012 (TWh) Long term Renewable power energy purchase sources, 15% agreements, 15% Cogeneration and factory plants, 12% Nuclear Thermal power plant, plants, 23% 35% 19 Rapid build-up of Renewable Energy (RE) and more expected Renewable Generation Capacity as of March 2013 3000 2500 214 1596 2000 2183 753 MW 1500 1000 980 500 682 93 29 0 Wind Power Photovoltaics Hydro Power Bio Power In operation (as of March 2013) Contracted new capacity Source: MEET Bulgaria has gone a long way in improving the sector’s environmental sustainability and is in good track to meet its obligations specified in the EU 20/20 package. Renewable capacity additions slowed down in 2013 given reductions in feed-in-tariffs. It is unlikely that a significant amount of the contracted new capacity becomes on-stream. 20 Development of Renewables driven by high Feed-in-Tariffs Installed capacity: 980 MW Feed-in-Tariffs \EURO/MWh 450 400 350 300 250 200 Installed capacity: 682 MW 150 FIT PV in Turkey: 104 EURO/MWh 100 FIT Wind in Turkey: 59 EURO/MWh 50 0 Solar PV (capacity < Solar PV (capacity > Onshore Wind 5MW) 5MW) Levelized cost per KWh* * Lower and upper level of the levelized cost of RES calculated assuming weighted average cost of capital of 7% and 10%, respectively Source: FIT from MEET and levelized costs calculated by Bank staff 21 Worsening generation cost trend – putting pressure on electricity prices  There has been an upward trend in generation costs (fixed+ variable costs) over the past five years.  The cost of long term agreements and renewables is well above the generation cost of the rest of State-owned power plants  This will puts pressure on electricity prices. 350 Evolution of Generation Costs 300 250 200 BGN / MWh 150 100 50 0 2007 2010 2011 2012 2007 2010 2011 2012 2007 2010 2011 2012 2007 2010 2011 2012 2012 2012 2011 2012 NPP Kozloduy Maritza East 2 Bobov Dol TPP Varna ME 1 ME 3 RES Variable costs Fixed costs Power Purchase Agreements Average FITs for RES * Nuclear and do not include costs for decommissioning of existing plants, long-term fuel storage, nor externality 22 costs. Coal-fired plants do not include externality costs Growing financial gaps threaten fiscal stability Estimated financial gaps resulting from long-term agreements, high efficiency cogeneration, and renewable energy Feed-in-tariffs (FTIs), net present value 2013-2030 14 1.2  Total financial gaps til 2030 1.16 % of GDP Net Present Value of financial gap BGN Billion projected to range from 5 to 20 12 1.0 Billion BGN 0.81% of GDP Financial gap as % of GDP 10 0.8  Financial deficit in the next 12 8.42 months is projected to be 8 0.6 between 800-1,200 Million BGN 6 5.34 0.4  Several measures will be 4 0.2 needed to address this gap -- 2.26 2.04 increasing prices is not the only 2 0.0 solution. 2.27 1.67 0 -0.2 1 remain NEK prices NEK prices2increase by constant 5% once Renewable Energy FITs High Efficiency Cogeneration Long Term Power Purchase Agreements Estimated net present value of financial gap until 2030 assuming that only 10 % of RES new contracted 23 capacity will go on stream and assuming a 5% discount rate. Large debt accumulation if no action is taken Financial gaps per year resulting from long-term agreements, high efficiency cogeneration, and renewable energy Feed-in-tariffs (FTIs) in nominal terms 21 20.34 Total financial gap in nominal terms Billions BGN 20 Long-term Power Purchase Agreements 19 Renewable energy FITs 18 High Efficient Cogeneration 17 16 15 13.72 14 13 12 11 10 9 8.47 8 7 6 5 4 3.16 3 2 1 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 Estimated the level of financial gap until 2030 assuming that only 10 % of RES new contracted capacity will go on stream 24 Mismanagement of contingent liabilities • NEK's precarious financial situation is the result of many state actions: • Generous payments for service delivery for some technologies set by law • Lack of planning of renewable additions • Public investments in the power sector handled off budget • Delays in introducing market reforms (e.g., balancing power market, export) • No government entity monitoring arrears build-up to assess the consequences on government finances and the economy. • Bulgaria lacks a system to properly manage contingent liabilities (e.g. a recording system in the Ministry of Finance and established legal principles for approving sub-sovereign liabilities and their provisioning). • Contingent liabilities that have materialized could be managed more efficiently by the Ministry of Finance rather than BEH. 25 25 III. Affordability 26 The financial crisis affected the poorest households The poor were particularly hit: real income of the The unemployment rate doubled poorest dropped by 12.6 % between 2009 and between Q2 of 2008 and the Q2 of 2010 2012 Real Income per capital growth Unemployment rate 20 17.7 14 16 12 15 13 11 10 9 10 8 5 6 4 5 % 5 3 4 6 1.9 % 2009-2010 4 0 2007-2008 2008-2009 2009-2010 2 -5 -2 0 -5 -6 -5 -10 -8 -15 -12.6 Quintiles of expenditure per capita, where 1 is the Source: EUROSTAT poorest quintile and 5 the richest quintile Source: Bank Staff Estimates based on EU SILC (2007-2011) 27 Electricity is the most important energy source for households, especially for the poor Bulgarian households are more reliant on The poorest spend the most on electricity (up to electricity than households in other EU 9% of their total household expenditures) Member States 100% 90% Share of energy expenditures by fuel 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Bulgaria Estonia Poland Hungary Lithuania Latvia Romania Electricity Gas LPG Wood Coal District heat and hot water Solid & Other Fuels Source: Bank staff estimates, ECAPOV database Source: Bank staff estimates, ECAPOV database 28 61% of Bulgarian households considered energy poor* Rural Urban Average Rural Average Urban 100% 90% 90% 86% 76% 78% 80% 70% 73% % of energy poor 70% 62% 60% 52% 48% 52% 50% 46% 40% 32% 30% 20% 10% 0% Quintiles 1 2 3 4 5 Source: Bank staff estimates, ECAPOV database based on the 2007 HBS  78% of the energy poor are located in urban areas  Bulgaria (61%) ranks second among countries in Europe and Central Asia, with the highest rate of energy poor after Hungary (80%) and just before Tajikistan (60%) * A conventional measure of high spending on energy is energy poverty, defined as spending more than 10 percent of household resources to cover energy needs 29 Electricity tariffs hiked in 2012 but still below 2007 levels Electricity tariffs for households by block of consumption, in real terms Source: Bulgaria National Statistic Institute 30 Despite increases, tariffs lowest among EU Member States 0.35 Retail electricity prices (€ per kWh) 0.30 0.30 0.26 0.25 0.23 0.21 0.19 0.20 0.20 0.17 0.17 0.16 0.15 0.15 0.15 0.14 0.13 0.11 0.10 0.08 0.05 0.00 31 Targeted safety nets have been marginalized Expenditure on Social Assistance declined 160 140 120 Index (2003=100 100 80 60 40 20 0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Pensions Last Resort Social Assistance Housing & utility benefits Source: World Bank ECA Social Protection Database 32 There have been large declines in expenditure and beneficiaries of Guaranteed Minimum Income and heating allowance… Expenditure on GMI benefits (as a percent of GDP) in 2010 was 1/4th the expenditure in 2003 2003 2010 Guaranteed Minimum 0.28 0.07 Income Heating Allowance 0.24 0.09 Number of beneficiaries of heating allowance halved between 2003 and 2010 2003 2010 Guaranteed Minimum 143,493 44,342 Income Heating allowance 542,685 255,047 33 … as a result, more than 78% of the poor have not been protected by targeted safety nets Around 78% of the poor were not covered by 88% of the poor did not benefit from the the main programs targeted to protect them heating allowance 100% 100% 90% 90% 80% 80% 70% 70% 60% 60% 87 89 88 89 50% 96 50% 96 40% 40% 30% 30% 13% 11% 20% 4% 20% 10% 10% 13% 11% 12% 11% 0% 4% 0% 4% Poor Energy Poor Poor and Energy Poor Energy Poor Poor and Energy Poor Poor Percentage receiving the Guaranteed Percentage receiving Heating Allowance Minimum Income (GMI Benefits) To adequately protect the poor, at least restore budget allocation levels that existed in the early 2000s Source: Staff estimates from ECAPOV 34 IV. Future Directions 35 The full package of reforms needed to address the issues in the sector Diagnosis and Package of actions objective Immediate Follow-on Public distrust: Ensure that state officials and senior employees disclose Eliminate conflicts of interest of state officials and senior their financial interests in the energy sector employees Regain public confidence by Dissolve BEH to increase transparency and accountability Complete performance benchmarking and service audit in emphasizing of State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) the energy and mining sectors transparency Grant financial and decision-making independence for the Implement merit-based and competitive hiring of Regulator as per EU Directives; Establish a plan to build new/replacement Board Members and Senior Management technical capacity of SOEs Establish a power exchange to increase pricing transparency and cost efficiency Unsustainable Eliminate abuse of preferential pricing for cogeneration Facilitate exports to increase sector cash flows by Cost Structure: eliminating transmission surcharges and efficient allocation NEK and Ministry of Finance to equitably address of cross-border interconnection capacity Address growing financial liabilities arising from preferential tariffs for deficits in the Renewable Energy, long-term agreements, and failed Regulator to define medium-term tariff adjustments to sector investments such as Belene reduce deficits in the sector Reduce costs by improving the allocation of generation quotas in the regulated market and ensuring economic dispatch Affordability: Increase budgetary funding to enhance coverage and Reform the social protection system to improve incentives amount of the Guaranteed Minimum Income and Heating to work and consolidate less effective programs Make energy Allowance programs services Improve mechanisms to utilize EU structural Funds for affordable to the Scale-up Energy Efficiency (EE) program in the national large-scale (EE) programs poor residential buildings to make energy affordable Consult with citizens and other stakeholders to prepare and finalize a Policy Paper that sets the strategic direction for the recovery and long-term development of the power sector 36 Disclaimer: This rapid assessment was conducted by staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this assessment do not reflect the views of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent. This assessment has been undertaken by the World Bank based on data provided by the Bulgarian Ministry of Economy, Energy and Tourism (MEET), the State Water and Energy Regulatory Commission (SWERC), the National Statistical Institute (NSI), and the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy (MLSP). For questions please contact: In Sofia: Ms. Ivelina Taushanova, World Bank; 359-2-969-7239; itaushanova@worldbank.org In Washington, DC: Ms. Heather Worley, World Bank; 1-202-458-4857; hworley@worldbank.org For more information: http://www.worldbank.org/en/country/bulgaria http://www.worldbank.org/content/dam/Worldbank/document/eca/Bulgaria-Snapshot.pdf 37