Power tariff analysis India
One of the most consequential updates in Power tariff analysis India comes from HPERC’s order approving—yet modifying—the PPA for the 1 MW Sansal SHP. By lowering the tariff to Rs 4.67/kWh after imputing a ₹93.60-lakh subsidy that the developer simply chose not to claim, the regulator has reaffirmed that consumer interests override developer discretion. This is a key evolution in Power tariff analysis India, where regulators increasingly insist that eligible incentives must be mandatorily built into tariff computation.
The project’s long delays, Amnesty Scheme utilisation and revised SCOD placement within the 4th Control Period reflect how scheduling shifts interact with tariff eligibility—again a recurring issue in Power tariff analysis India where control-period boundaries significantly influence project viability.
HPERC’s stance that “benefit available is benefit availed” eliminates strategic non-claiming of subsidies. The Commission further tightened compliance by mandating disclosure of any future incentives, reaffirming royalty obligations and cautioning that slippage beyond the control period will automatically reduce the applicable tariff.
For stakeholders engaged in Power tariff analysis India, the order demonstrates a tightening regulatory discipline: • Subsidy deduction is non-negotiable, • Tariffs must reflect real net capital outlay, • Small deviations in SCOD can materially reshape payable tariffs, • PPA approvals now come with layered compliance triggers.
Power Tariff Analysis India, HPSEBL, HPERC, Hydro Tariff, Regulatory Updates, Energyline India.














