Indian power plants should be compensated for importing coal: CERC
04 Jan 2023
Power tariffs for imported
coal-based plants should cover their costs as well as a "reasonable profit
margin," the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) said in an
order dated Jan 3
BENGALURU (Reuters) - Indian power plants
that rely on imported coal should be fully compensated for supplying
electricity demand under forced circumstances, the country's power regulator
said on Tuesday.
Power
tariffs for imported coal-based plants should cover their costs as well as a
"reasonable profit margin," the Central Electricity Regulatory
Commission (CERC) said in an order dated Jan. 3.
The order was related to
Tata Power Co Ltd approaching the CERC against the tariff fixed by the
power ministry after a forced directive last year to keep operating to avert a
power crisis.
The CERC order also said that the tariff
fixed by the power ministry was for an interim period.
In May last
year, India invoked an emergency clause in the Electricity Act to ask
non-operational imported coal-based plants, with a combined capacity of about
17 gigawatts, to resume functioning to meet high electricity demand.
The plants
had been shut due to higher international coal prices