Pakistani PM Announces Cut In Industrial Power Tariffs, Export Financing Rates http://dlvr.it/TQgP7c

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Pakistani PM Announces Cut In Industrial Power Tariffs, Export Financing Rates http://dlvr.it/TQgP7c
When “settled” doesn’t mean decided
In power regulation, risk often hides in the record. Tariffs, capital recovery, and accountability depend on what a judgment says — not always on what was heard.
A recent tribunal clarification corrected how a capital cost issue had been shown in an earlier order. On paper, it looked closed. In reality, it was deferred.
Most readers won’t spot the gap. That’s the blind spot. Because once an issue is tagged as finished, money flows — or stops — on that belief.
What happens when that belief is questioned later remains open.
Full analysis on https://www.energylineindia.com/
The cost reset nobody reads closely
Big numbers arrived before the new tariff period even began. Rs.16,000 crore in fixed costs. More capex waiting. What changed is formal. What’s harder to see is how cost pressure moves when filings land together instead of alone.
Many will scan the filings. Few will track how recovery timing quietly shapes who pays later. Hearings are coming. After that, the bill looks different — even if nothing dramatic is announced.
Full analysis on https://www.energylineindia.com/
State Electricity Tariffs
KERC’s corrigendum to the MSEZ Tariff Order 2025 is a reminder that in STATE ELECTRICITY TARIFFS, precision in language is as important as accuracy in numbers. The Commission corrected a typographical error in a table that had incorrectly described the allocation of distribution network costs between HT and LT consumers.
While the table text showed a 30:70 split, the actual tariff calculations were consistently based on a 95% HT and 5% LT allocation. The corrigendum confirms that there is no change in tariffs, revenue recovery, or consumer impact—only a correction to ensure textual consistency.
For analysts following STATE ELECTRICITY TARIFFS, the clarification is more than cosmetic. Tariff orders often form the basis for audits, ARR true-ups, and appellate review. A mismatch between narrative and calculation can create avoidable regulatory risk, even when financial outcomes are unaffected.
The reaffirmed 95:5 allocation reflects the physical reality of SEZ distribution systems. In MSEZ, network costs are driven primarily by HT infrastructure, while LT networks serve a limited role. Maintaining this allocation protects cost-reflectivity and avoids cross-subsidisation distortions.
KERC’s prompt issuance of a corrigendum strengthens the legal robustness of the tariff order and signals heightened documentation discipline. As STATE ELECTRICITY TARIFFS evolve toward longer control periods and more explicit cost attribution, such corrections help preserve regulatory certainty.
For consumers and utilities alike, the message is reassurance rather than change: billing outcomes remain unchanged, and the tariff framework stands as originally approved—now with clearer wording, State electricity tariffs, KERC corrigendum, MSEZ power tariff, distribution network costs, electricity tariff regulation.
When every part of the grid gets expensive
Electricity feels simple at the socket. The costs behind it aren’t. In Uttarakhand, new tariff filings expose how charges rise at every step — dams, wires, system control, retail supply.
The change wasn’t dramatic. It was coordinated. Small increases, layered together. That’s what most readers miss.
Consumers carry the risk unless something interrupts the chain. Whether that happens before tariffs harden is still an open question.
Full analysis on https://www.energylineindia.com/
Thermal power plant tenders
WBPDCL’s Kolaghat ESP renovation shows how Thermal power plant tenders are being redefined by environmental regulation. With quantified tariff impact and tribunal-linked compliance, pollution-control capex is now inseparable from tariff design.For utilities, this means future Thermal power plant tenders will face sharper scrutiny on cost efficiency, phasing and execution discipline, not just technical adequacy, Thermal Power Plant Tenders, ESP Upgrade, Coal Power India, Power Tariffs.
Cheap market power curbs NDMC’s Q4 PPAC claim as DERC caps surcharge at 8.75%
Delhi’s power regulator has sent a clear message to utilities chasing aggressive surcharge recovery: cheaper market power weakens the case for sharp tariff escalation.
The Delhi Electricity Regulatory Commission (DERC) has rejected New Delhi Municipal Council’s attempt to impose a steep additional Power Purchase Cost Adjustment Charge (PPAC) for the January–March 2025 quarter. The Commission ruled that NDMC’s procurement strategy — dominated by lower-cost market purchases — does not justify such a front-loaded increase in consumer tariffs.
NDMC’s push for higher PPAC
In Petition No. 46/2025, NDMC approached DERC seeking approval to recover PPAC for Q4 of FY 2024–25. While the utility was already levying an 8.75% PPAC on a suo-motu basis, it claimed that its total PPAC requirement for the quarter stood at 89.55%. NDMC therefore sought permission to recover the remaining 80.80% from consumers over the three-month period.
PPAC is designed as a pass-through mechanism, allowing utilities to recover variations in power purchase costs compared with approved tariffs. NDMC cited higher procurement costs as the basis for its claim.
Regulator zeroes in on procurement mix
During scrutiny of the petition, DERC focused closely on how NDMC sourced its power. The Commission observed that around 90% of NDMC’s electricity during the quarter came from short-term and medium-term markets — sources that were significantly cheaper than long-term contracted power.
DERC noted that NDMC’s proposal effectively sought PPAC recovery across its entire power purchase basket, despite the dominance of lower-cost market-linked procurement. Allowing such recovery, the regulator said, would have translated into a sharp and immediate tariff shock for consumers.
Additional surcharge denied
Taking a consumer-impact view, DERC concluded that the additional PPAC sought by NDMC could not be justified under the prevailing cost structure. The Commission therefore denied permission for the additional 80.80% recovery, while allowing NDMC to continue levying the existing 8.75% surcharge already being recovered within permissible limits.
The order reinforces that PPAC is not an automatic entitlement and must reflect actual cost stress, particularly as utilities increasingly rely on market-based procurement.
True-up route remains open
At the same time, DERC clarified that NDMC is not permanently barred from recovering legitimate costs. Any surplus or deficit arising from power purchase and transmission expenses will be examined during the true-up of the relevant financial year. Such amounts, if approved, would carry carrying cost, subject to a detailed prudence check of NDMC’s procurement and billing practices.
A broader regulatory signal
Beyond NDMC, the ruling carries wider implications for distribution utilities across India. As discoms lean more heavily on short-term and medium-term markets, regulators are tightening scrutiny on surcharge claims. Cheaper market power, the order suggests, strengthens the expectation that cost benefits should flow through to consumers in real time rather than being clawed back through front-loaded PPAC.
For NDMC consumers, the decision averts a sharp Q4 tariff shock. For utilities, it underscores how procurement strategy and cost composition are now central to regulatory outcomes on surcharge recovery.
For more: https://www.energylineindia.com/