The National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government has come in for some flak for claiming that it has completed the job of providing all villages with electricity, something not done in the last 70 years. It is fair to say that the bulk of the work of rural electrification was done by the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government, which had brought power lines to nearly 97 per cent of villages when it lost power in 2014.

Put simply, the NDA under Narendra Modi should claim credit for only the last three per cent, which included 18,452 villages which had no power and 1,275 other villages which UPA had wrongly categorised as having power. The NDA can legitimately claim it has electrified only the last 19,727 villages – and not the rest.

However, this formulation is an over-simplification, and gives less credit to the NDA than it deserves. Reason: the effort involved in providing electricity to the last few thousand villages was much more than for some of the previous efforts in providing power to an equivalent number of villages.

It is common sense that the last mile in a project is often the most difficult. The villages that weren’t electrified earlier were not randomly left without power by previous governments. Many of them were special villages, that were either far from the electricity grid, or inaccessible in other ways.

In an interview to CNBC TV-18, Ajay Kumar Bhalla, Power Secretary, explained why the last mile in village electrification was trickier to handle than the rest.

He said: “the achievement is not the numbers; the achievement is the difficulty under which these villages were connected. Some of the villages in Arunachal Pradesh are bordering Myanmar where we had to use helicopters for dropping the materials. (In) some villages in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K), we had to take the help of the Indian Air Force to drop the materials. In Chhattisgarh’s Left-wing extremism areas, we had to find innovative ways to do the electrification. So that is the difficult part which we had to achieve.”

And then there were places where even the grid did not reach. According to Bhalla, “we have connected about 15,600-and-odd villages by grid and the remaining by off-grid solutions, which are generally solar solutions”.

This means it wasn’t just about providing power connections in difficult terrain and adverse conditions, but also setting up standalone power units where the grid was non-existent.

There is no need to deny UPA its share of credit for bringing electricity to 97 per cent of villages; but there is equally no reason to deny the NDA credit for the last 3 per cent, which was among the toughest to electrify.

The next job is obviously to take power to every household – and this means connecting the power line to the 3.13 crore remaining households who live in villages that are electrified but don’t get it in their homes. Most of these households are in UP and Bihar, not the north-east or tribal areas.

This just shows that despite sending the largest contingents of MPs to the Lok Sabha, it has taken a non-Hindi belt politician to bring light to the Hindi heartland.