*Maha government directs Tata Power to supply to Reliance Infra till March*

Mumbai electricity consumers do not have to face powercuts for a while. The
Maharashtra Cabinet subcommittee chaired by Chief Minister Ashok Chavan on
Thursday intervened to resolve the ongoing dispute between Tata Power and
Reliance Infrastructure over power purchase. It has asked Tata Power to
maintain status quo by continuing to supply 460 Mw to Reliance
Infrastructure till June at the regulated price of Rs 4.40 per unit "in the
larger interest of consumers". From July till March 2011, Tata Power will
have to supply 200 Mw to Reliance at the same regulated price of Rs 4.40 per
unit. From April 2011, both would be asked to work out new power purchase
arrangements. Reliance would be asked to open tenders invited by it for
power purchase to meet its rising demand Chavan said, "The subcommittee was
unanimous in its decision that Tata Power be asked to maintain status quo
till June. Interest of consumers need to be safeguarded." Tata has been told
in no uncertain terms that the company should not sell surplus power through
the traded route, but purely through regulatory rates. After meeting
requirement of BrihanMumbai Electric Supply and Transport (BEST) and Tata
Power distribution company, the subcommittee has asked Tata Power to supply
the remaining available power from its Mumbai generation to Reliance at the
rate fixed by the Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission (MERC). In
case of a shortfall after the full allocation of power generated by Tata and
Reliance to Mumbai licensees, the subcommittee has asked the latter to cater
to its own additional requirement and bear the cost of the same. Reliance
has been asked to submit a detailed action plan on the steps they have taken
and propose to take to resolve the issue of power availability and capacity
addition in a time bound manner in the best interest of consumers. In case
it fails to do so, the subcommittee has warned that a suitable penalty would
be imposed on it. A senior government official, who was present at the
meeting, said Tata would not be allowed to sell any power from generating
assets created for Mumbai to its trading company in case of shortfall of any
of the licensees of Mumbai. Currently, Reliance faces a shortfall of 500 Mw
to meet its requirement. To that extent, Tata would be asked to refrain from
diverting power from generating assets created for Mumbai. The subcommittee
has been unanimous that MERC would be requested to immediately proceed with
necessary steps under the various provisions of the Electricity Act, 2003,
to ensure public interest is protected. The subcommittee has accepted the
recommendations made by a five-member panel headed by the state chief
secretary to look into the dispute between Tata and Reliance. The
subcommittee says MERC should be requested to urgently address the issue of
a mechanism similar to cross-subsidy surcharge to regulate the migration of
high-end, luxurious users of electricity. This needs to be addressed in a
manner that ensures the tariff of high-end consumers of one licensee does
not reduce at the cost of the tariffs of lower-end consumers of another
licensee, thus avoiding cherry picking of high-end consumers.

Source

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