Revise power rate quarterly, advises Central government

The Central government wants states to revise power tariff every three months to reduce the intensity of hike, if any.

Update: 2017-03-26 19:11 GMT
Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao on Friday ruled out power tariff hike this year.

Hyderabad: If the Central government had its way, the power tariff would change once in every three months, similar to the model adopted for petrol and diesel.

The quarterly revision in the power tariff by regulators is one of the conditions imposed by the Central government as part of the Ujwal Discom Assurance Yoja-na (UDAY), which seeks bailout debt-ladden power distribution companies in states, including Telangana and AP. Joining the UDAY scheme, however, was optional for the states.

According to the Central government, the provision of quarterly revision of power tariff will reduce the high cost burden borne by discoms. “It will be easier to implement the new tariff and could be absorbed by consumers without much difficulty as the quarterly change would typically be small,” a Transco official said, explaining the Central government’s stance.

At present, the power tariff is revised only once in a year by the power regulators. However, the Centre feels that the regulators  cannot pass  on the inefficiency  of  Discoms to consumers. 

The Telangana government, Transco officials claim, would be free to implement the revision or not to do so. After the entry of private power producers, the cost of power has come down drastically.  

Now the power is available at less than Rs 2 per unit. During the night when the power demand plummets, the cost of power gets reduced by 50 per cent.

Sometimes, the power could be bought for Rs 1.80 per unit from private power units. However, the Discoms charge the same rate throughout the year. While the average cost of power purchase from private producers is less than Rs 4 a unit, Discoms are collecting more than Rs 5 per unit.

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