
SC fixes 3-year deadline to clear Rs 27,200 cr power dues to Delhi discoms
Regulatory assets, essentially deferred revenue gaps to be recovered in future tariffs, have risen sharply, reaching Rs 12,993.53 crore for BSES Rajdhani Power Ltd (BRPL), Rs 8,419.14 crore for BSES Yamuna Power Ltd (BYPL) and Rs 5,787.70 crore for Tata Power Delhi Distribution Ltd (TPDDL) as on March 31, 2024, totalling Rs 27,200.37 crore.
The verdict, which may have a significant bearing on Delhi power consumers, was delivered by a bench of Justices P S Narasimha and Sandeep Mehta on the petitions filed by three electricity distribution companies against the Delhi Electricity Regulatory Commission's (DERC) tariff orders over the years that led to the ballooning of regulatory assets.
Dealing with the term 'regulatory asset", the bench said, 'In the context of tariff determination for electricity utilities is an intangible asset that is created by the Regulatory Commissions in recognition of an uncovered revenue gap or revenue shortfall when a distribution licensee could not fully recover the costs reasonably incurred by it through revenue from tariff.
'This portion of the revenue requirement is not included while determining the tariff for the particular year. Rather, the distribution company is entitled to receive or recover such revenue in the future, over a period of time." Justice Narasimha, writing an 82-page judgment, examined issues relating to regulatory assets, their position in the regulatory regime for the determination of tariffs and the powers of regulatory commissions.
The bench said, 'As a first principle, tariff shall be cost-reflective… and the revenue gap between the approved ARR (Annual Revenue Requirement) and the estimated annual revenue from approved tariff may be in exceptional circumstances." It directed that the regulatory asset should not exceed a reasonable percentage, which percentage can be arrived on the basis of the Electricity Rules that prescribe three per cent of the ARR as the guiding principle.
'If a regulatory asset is created, it must be liquidated within a period of 3 years, taking Rule 23 as the guiding principle… The existing regulatory asset must be liquidated in a maximum of 4 years starting from April 01, 2024, taking Rule 23 as the guiding principle," it directed.
According to this direction, the discoms will have to be paid their dues within four years which will be counted from 2024.
'Regulatory Commissions must provide the trajectory and roadmap for liquidation of the existing regulatory asset, which will include a provision for dealing with carrying costs. Regulatory Commissions must also undertake a strict and intensive audit of the circumstances in which the distribution companies have continued without recovery of the regulatory asset," it said.
The regulatory commissions shall, in general, follow the principles governing creation, continuation and liquidation of the regulatory asset, as laid down in the judgment, it said.
The bench said, 'Electricity is a public good. Its generation, transmission, and distribution are statutorily regulated to ensure access to supply, on a non-rival and non-exclusive basis." It further said, 'The statutory regulators, that is Central and State Regulatory Commissions along with Union and State Governments and other stakeholders are equally bound by the mandate under Part-IV of the Constitution for its equitable distribution." While acknowledging that regulatory assets can help avoid sudden tariff shocks, the court warned that their unchecked growth reflects 'regulatory failure" and disproportionately burdens consumers.
It directed that tariffs must be cost-reflective and revenue gaps allowed only in exceptional cases.
The bench said that the regulatory assets must not exceed three per cent of the annual revenue requirement, as guided by Rule 23 of the Electricity Rules.
It said the regulators must set and publish clear recovery roadmaps, audit causes for delays and account for carrying costs. It also said the Appellate Tribunal for Electricity (APTEL) must monitor compliance using its statutory powers. PTI SJK KSS KSS KSS
(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) view comments
First Published:
August 06, 2025, 23:30 IST
News agency-feeds SC fixes 3-year deadline to clear Rs 27,200 cr power dues to Delhi discoms
Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
27 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Siddaramaiah slams Trump's tariffs, accuses PM Modi of ‘headline management' over national onterest
Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Thursday criticised the United States' decision to impose a 50% tariff on Indian goods, calling it 'economic blackmail' and a direct consequence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's focus on image-building rather than serious diplomacy. : Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah. (PTI) Take a look at Siddaramaiah's post In a post on social media platform X, Siddaramaiah backed Congress leader Rahul Gandhi's sharp attack on the Modi government's foreign policy. 'Rahul Gandhi raised timely alarms on multiple national issues, from GST to demonetisation and COVID mishandling. His warnings were dismissed, but time has proven him right. Now, he's been proven right yet again on the Trump tariff issue,' Siddaramaiah wrote. Also Read - Massive traffic jam on Bengaluru's Outer Ring Road leaves school kids stranded, sparks outrage Referring to the former US President's tariff hike and additional penalties over India's Russian oil imports, the Congress veteran said the developments were not mere trade measures but a strategic failure by the Modi government. He echoed Gandhi's criticism of the move as a pressure tactic aimed at coercing India into an unfair trade agreement. 'Donald Trump's decision to impose a 50% tariff on Indian products is not diplomacy, it's blackmail. And it's the result of PM Modi's obsession with headline management instead of defending national interests,' Siddaramaiah said. He further alleged that since 2019, the prime minister had gone out of his way to appease Trump, referencing Modi's campaign-style slogan "Abki Baar Trump Sarkar" during the 'Howdy Modi' event in the US and the grand welcome at the 'Namaste Trump' rally in India, held just as the COVID-19 pandemic was surfacing. 'Modi tried to create a personal equation, even coining terms like MIGA (Make India Great Again), in line with Trump's MAGA pitch. But Trump viewed these moves not as diplomacy, but as weakness,' Siddaramaiah said. He went on to highlight Trump's actions that undermined India, including repeated claims of mediating peace between India and Pakistan, cozying up to the Pakistani military leadership, and remaining indifferent to issues that directly affected India's security and dignity. Also Read - 'India must retaliate': Shashi Tharoor says 'hidden message' in US tariffs, cites China's oil purchases 'While Trump undermined India internationally, Modi chose silence to remain in Washington's favour. There was no protest, no resistance, just submission,' the CM alleged. Siddaramaiah also criticised Modi's outreach to Elon Musk, suggesting that it was part of the same flawed strategy, especially given Musk's alignment with Trump. Calling on the Prime Minister to 'grow up and act in India's interest,' Siddaramaiah accused the BJP government of ignoring early warnings and putting India's economic and diplomatic strength at risk.


Deccan Herald
27 minutes ago
- Deccan Herald
Bajaj Electricals Q1 net down 97% to Rs 91 lakh
The company had posted a consolidated net profit of Rs 28.11 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous fiscal, Bajaj Electricals said in a regulatory filing.


Economic Times
27 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Lok Sabha passes Manipur Appropriation Bill, 2025
Synopsis The Lok Sabha approved the Manipur Appropriation Bill, 2025. This happened despite opposition members' sloganeering regarding Bihar electoral rolls. The bill allows funds from Manipur's Consolidated Fund for the current financial year. Nirmala Sitharaman criticized the opposition for disrupting proceedings. She highlighted an additional allocation of Rupees 2,898 crore for Manipur. ANI Lok Sabha passes Manipur Appropriation Bill The Lok Sabha on Thursday passed the Manipur Appropriation Bill, 2025, amid sloganeering by opposition members over revision of Bihar electoral after the passing of the Bill by voice vote, Lok Sabha proceedings were adjourned for the Appropriation Bill, 2025 authorises payment and appropriation of certain sums from and out of the Consolidated Fund of the State of Manipur for the services of the current financial mentioned Bill was passed without any discussion as opposition members did not relent. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman slammed the opposition over disrupting the Lok Sabha proceedings and said while they talk of Manipur, they do not want money to go to the state, which is under President's rule. Speaking on the Manipur Goods and Services Tax (Amendment) Bill, 2025, Sitharaman said, "When the government brings a Budget for Manipur - allocating funds for its development - the Opposition neither listens to it nor has the courage to engage with it."She announced that the government has made an additional allocation of Rs 2,898 crore for Manipur, of which Rs 1,667 crore will be spent under the Capital Head and Rs 1,231 crore under the Revenue additional fund allocation is said to support rehabilitation of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), security-related expenditure, deployment charges for CAPFs, prepayment of high-interest loans and additional support under SASCI.