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Electricity sector in Paraguay

Electricity sector of Paraguay
Data
Electricity coverage (2022)99.2%
Installed capacity (2023)13,317MW
Share of fossil energy<0.1%
Share of renewable energy>100%
GHG emissions from electricity generation (2005)3.85 Mt CO2
Average electricity use (2023)4769kWh per capita
Distribution losses (2005)31%; (LAC average in 2005: 13.6%)
Transmission losses (2003)7.3%
Consumption by sector
(% of total)
Residential41%
Industrial26%
Commercial18.3%
Tariffs and financing
Average residential tariff
(US$/kW·h, 2006)
0.056; (LAC average in 2005: 0.115)
Average industrial tariff
(US$/kW·h, 2006)
0.276-0.320; (LAC average in 2005: 0.107)
Average commercial tariff
(US$/kW·h, 2006)
0.090
Services
Sector unbundlingNo
Share of private sector in generation0%
Competitive supply to large usersNo
Competitive supply to residential usersNo
Institutions
No. of service providers1
Responsibility for regulationANDE
Responsibility for policy-settingVice ministry of Mines and Energy
Responsibility for the environmentMinistry of Environment and Sustainable Development, MADES
Electricity sector lawYes (1993)
Renewable energy lawYes
CDM transactions related to the electricity sector0 registered CDM projects

Paraguay is one of the few countries in Latin America that has maintained an integrated electrical system.[1]

Because of the dominance of hydroelectricity, tariffs (mostly residential) are remarkably below the averages for the region. However, despite the abundance of resources, the Paraguayan electricity system faces difficulty due to the lack of investment in transmission and distribution networks. In addition, distribution losses are among the highest in the region.

Electricity supply and demand

Installed capacity and generation

Paraguay is the only country in Latin America with almost 100 percent hydroelectric generation capacity (8,116 MW) in 2005.[2]

Paraguay operates two binational hydroelectric dams. Itaipu dam, by far the largest power station in the country, is operated with Brazil and has an installed capacity of 7000 MW (86 percent of Paraguay's generation capacity). Yacyretá, the second largest hydroelectric facility, has an installed capacity of 900 MW (11 percent), and is operated with Argentina. A third plant, Acaray has an installed capacity of 210 MW (3 percent). Thermal plants contribute less than 0.1 percent.[3]

All of Paraguay's electricity for domestic consumption comes from a single facility, the binational 14 GW Itaipu hydroelectric dam.[1]

Source Installed capacity (MW) Installed capacity (% of total)
Itaipu 7,000 86%
Yacyretá 900 11%
Acaray 210 3%
Thermal 6 0.1%
TOTAL 8,116 100.1%

Source: ESMAP, 2006. Installed capacity shown for Itaipu and Yacyretá refers only to the Parguayan share in these plants.

While total generation amounted to 51.17 TWh in 2005, consumption was only 5.01 TWh, with exports as high as 43.8 TWh.[4]

Demand

In 2005, total electricity consumed in Paraguay was 5.01 TWh, which corresponds to 849 kWh per capita.[4] Electricity generated by Itaipu and Acaray, located in the East of the country, is transported to the West (to the Asunción area), where over 60% of the total national consumption is located.[3]

Electricity consumption by consumer group is divided as follows:[3]

  • Residential: 41%
  • Commercial: 18.3%
  • Industrial: 26%
  • Others: 14.2%

In 2004, the country consumed only 16% of its 50% share of Itaipu's production, exporting the rest to Brazil. As for Yacyreta, Paraguay consumes less than 1% of its share, exporting the rest to Argentina.[1]

The electricity interconnections that allow power exchanges with Brazil and Argentina are:

Entities Country Supply point Voltage (kV) Power (MW)
FURNAS, ELECTROSUL, ELECTROBRAS Brazil Itaipu 500 7,000
EBISA Argentina Yacyretá 500 1,540
ENERSUL Brazil Pedro Juan Caballero 23 3
COPEL Brazil Acaray 132 50
EMSA Argentina C.A. López 132 30
TRANSNEA/EDEFOR Argentina Guarambaré 220 80

Source: ESMAP, 2006

Access to electricity

In 2005, almost 90% of the population in Paraguay had access to electricity, which is just slightly below than the 94.6% average for LAC[5]

The 2002 Census revealed that 87% of the households without electricity were located in rural areas, where access was about 77%. Rural coverage varies considerably among the different regions of the country. It is lowest in the remote and sparsely populated Chaco, or Western region.[6] The table below shows rural coverage by Department for 2002:

See also:Departments of Paraguay (including a map)

Department/region Rural households with electricity(%)
Concepción 68
San Pedro 78
Cordillera 86
Guairá 87
Caaguazú 78
Caazapá 68
Itaipuá 81
Misiones 79
Paraguarí 82
Alto Paraná 82
Central 93
Ñeembucú 62
Amambay 43
Canindeyú 58
Average Eastern Region 78
Presidente Hayes 51
Boquerón 57
Alto Paraguay 29
Average Western Region 46
National Average 77

Source: Pulfer, 2005 (from 2002 Census)

Since 2004, the National Electricity Administration (ANDE) has been carrying out a Program to Recover Distribution Works under the Self-Help System (Sistema de Autoayuda), which aims at the regularization of all the low and medium voltage distribution networks. This program, with a 10-year time-horizon, is implemented according to priorities defined by the conservation status of the networks involved. Under this program, installations that do not comply with current ANDE's rules are replaced.[3]

Service quality

Interruption frequency and duration

In 2005, the average number of interruptions per subscriber was 16.4, while duration of interruptions per subscriber was 7.58 hours. While the number of interruptions is just slightly above than the weighted average for LAC, 13 interruptions, the duration is well below the weighted average of 14 hours.[5]

Blackouts

Despite consuming less than 6 TWh per year and exporting close to 45 TWh per year, Paraguay faces blackouts as well as a serious risk of suffering an energy crisis. This is the result of the limitations of both the transmission and distribution systems. The ceiling of the system is placed by ANDE's at 1,700 MW, with demand above 1,500 MW in 2008.[7] Transmission capacity is urgently needed to avoid a supply crisis [7] in a system in which quality and an adequate technical service is practically nonexistent.[3]

Different authors believe that the price received for the electricity sold to Brazil (from Paraguay's share in Itaipu) and also to Argentina to some extent (from its share in Yacyreta) is currently too low. The “fair price” established by the Itaipu Treaty was conceived on the basis of a “compensation for concession of energy” and not on the basis of a commercial exchange. This price has remained very low (about US$2.81 per MWh). It is argued that, if this price was more in line with actual electricity prices in the Brazilian market, Paraguay would have enough resources to strengthen its electricity transmission capacity.[7]

Distribution and transmission losses

In 2005, distribution losses in Paraguay were has high as 31%, well above the 13.5% weighted average for LAC[5] and up from about 22% in 2001 [8]

System losses have become a serious problem in the last few years, having followed a continuous upward trend. The highest percentage of losses occurs in the National Interconnected System (SIN), while the remaining corresponds to the bi-national enterprises. In the SIN, distribution losses represented 23% of the total in 2003, while transmission losses, according to ANDE, were 7.3%. ANDE has established a 23% target for electricity losses for the year 2010.[3]

Responsibilities in the electricity sector

Responsibilities in the Paraguayan electricity sector are concentrated in a single, vertically integrated public monopoly, the National Electricity Administration (Administración Nacional de Electricidad, ANDE).

Policy and regulation

Law 167/93 indicates that the Vice ministry of Mines and Energy (under the Ministry of Public Works and Communication) is responsible for establishing and guiding energy policy, as well as for the study of the technical, economic, financial and legal aspects that promote energy use. However, the Vice ministry does not have the adequate resources to effectively perform its functions.[7]

In practice, all the energy responsibilities are concentrated in ANDE, which is the de facto electricity regulator and provider. ANDE also elaborates the tariff structure, which is then analyzed and approved by the Economic Council of the Executive Power. The Council usually sets lower tariffs to the ones proposed by ANDE, which leads to a lack of resources for the necessary investment for adequate performance of the electricity system.[3]

Generation, transmission and distribution

ANDE controls the country's entire electricity market, including generation, transmission and distribution. ANDE operates only one hydroelectric dam, Acaray, and six thermal power plants, with total installed capacity of 220 MW. It is also responsible for Paraguay's share of Itaipú and Yacyretá, the two bi-national hydroelectric facilities (See bi-national facilities above).

ANDE operates 3,400 kilometres (2,100 miles) of transmission lines in the Interconnected National System, divided in 6 subsystems, and 1,080 kilometres (670 miles) of distribution lines.[1] It is also responsible for all of the distribution, with two exceptions: CLYFSA (Compañía de Luz y Fuerza, S.A.), which has a concession to distribute and commercialize electricity in Villarrica, and the Empresas Distribuidoras Menonitas del Chaco Central.[3]

History of the electricity sector

Hydroelectric plants

Itaipu dam

In April 1973, the governments of Paraguay and Brazil signed the Itaipu Treaty, by which it was decided to create a binational entity to hydroelectric use of the Paraná River. This entity was constituted by ANDE (Paraguay) and ELECTROBRAS (Brazil). US$100 million were contributed in equal parts by both companies.[3]

Yacyretá Dam

View of the Yacyretá dam from up-river

In December 1973, the governments of Argentina and Paraguay signed the Yacyreta Treaty, by which ANDE and Agua y Energía constituted the Binational Entity, whose aim is the hydroelectric use of the Paraná river. US$100 million was contributed in equal parts by each company.[3]

Corpus Christi

In 1971, Paraguay and Argentina created the River Parana Joint Commission (Comisión Mixta del Río Paraná, COMIP), which started to carry out different studies (pre-feasibility, environmental, etc.) for the Corpus project, to be located upstream of the Paraná river, close to the towns of Corpus (in the Argentina Misiones Province and Puerto Bella Vista in Paraguay.[9] In the mid-1980s, Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil signed a tripartite agreement that established the operating height of the project, which would allow to bring into line the operation of Corpus with those of Yacyreta and Itaipu.[10]

The different alternatives for this project are still[when?] under study. As a large hydroelectric project, with installed capacity of about 3,000 MW and annual generation of about 19,000 GWh,[11] Corpus is a controversial project that is opposed both at the regional and social levels. In April 1996, in a plebiscite in the Misiones Province, the construction of the dam was opposed by almost 89% of the voters.[9]

Tariffs and subsidies

Tariffs

In 2006, the average national tariff in Paraguay was US$0.080 per kWh [8] Tariffs for the different consumer groups were:[8]

Subsidies

In November 2004, the Paraguayan Government approved Law 2,501, which broadened the electricity social tariff applied by ANDE. The social tariff is applied to residential users below 150kWh of monthly consumption. Currently, about 37% of total customers benefit from this tariff. ANDE estimates that this share will gradually increase to 56% of the total.[3]

Investment and financing

Investments for maintenance and expansion of the necessary assets to provide electricity service have been executed with the support of multilateral credit institutions.[3]

Summary of private participation in the electricity sector

The National Electricity Administration (Administración Nacional de Electricidad, ANDE), Paraguay's state-owned utility, controls the country's entire electricity market, including generation, transmission and distribution.[1]

Two small companies buy electricity from ANDE and have concessions to distribute and sell it: CLYFSA (Compañía de Luz y Fuerza, S.A.) in Villarrica, and the Empresas Distribuidoras Menonitas del Chaco Central.

Activity Private participation (%)
Generation 0% of installed capacity
Transmission 0%
Distribution Low

Electricity and the environment

Responsibility for the environment

The Environmental Directorate (Secretaría del Ambiente, SEAM) is the institution in charge of environmental issues in Paraguay, focusing on natural resources management and preservation.[12]

Greenhouse gas emissions

Paraguay emitted 3.85 million tons of CO2 in 2005, which corresponds to just 0.61 tCO2 per capita annually, the lowest rate in the LAC region after Haiti's.[13]

CDM projects in electricity

Currently (August 2008), there are no registered CDM projects in any sector in Paraguay.[14] The low emission factor of a fully hydroelectric system is most likely the reason for the absence of this type of projects in the electricity sector.

External assistance

Inter-American Development Bank

Currently, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) is contributing funds and assistance to one project in the electricity sector in Paraguay:

  • Phase I of a Multi-Phase Power Transmission Program supported through a US$69.5 million credit. The objective of this project, which was approved in December 2006 but has not disbursed any funds as of August 2008, is to strengthen transmission networks in already served areas as well as to extend them to areas still not being served.

The IDB is also providing technical assistance under two activities:

  • Support for Paraguay's Electrical Sector Modernization. The objective of this support is to "execute studies that will formulate the fundamental and integrated actions, to increase the total loss management capacity of the ANDE in these categories: i) management of loss, ii) prospection of losses, iii) regularization of systems and facilities, iv) collection of the recovered revenue, and v) loss prevention."
  • Development of a National Rural Electrification Program that will explore grid extension, renewable energy and natural gas solutions.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Energy Information Administration (EIA)
  2. ^ [1] International Atomic Energy Agency
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l ESMAP 2006
  4. ^ a b "International Energy Agency (IEA)". Archived from the original on 2016-07-09. Retrieved 2008-08-24.
  5. ^ a b c d e Benchmarking data of the electricity distribution sector in Latin America and Caribbean Region 1995-2005 Archived 2007-09-02 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Pulfer 2005
  7. ^ a b c d Casco Carreras 2008
  8. ^ a b c National Electricity Administration (ANDE)
  9. ^ a b Suárez Montorfano 2007
  10. ^ "Comisión Mixta del Río Paraná, COMIP". Archived from the original on 2008-08-28. Retrieved 2008-08-24.
  11. ^ "Viceministry of Energy and Mines". Archived from the original on 2008-11-04. Retrieved 2008-08-24.
  12. ^ "Environmental Directorate". Archived from the original on 2015-06-08. Retrieved 2008-08-24.
  13. ^ Energy Information Administration, International Emissions Data
  14. ^ UNFCCC

Sources

Casco Carreras, 2008. Presente y Futuro del Sector Energético Nacional. Centro de Análisis y Difusión de la Economía Paraguaya

ESMAP, 2006. Estrategia para el desarrollo del sector eléctrico del Paraguay.

Suarez Montorfano, 2007. El Proyecto hidroeléctrico Corpus Christi

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