Published on: September 3, 2025

SUPREME COURT ORDER ON REGULATORY ASSETS

SUPREME COURT ORDER ON REGULATORY ASSETS

NEWS

  • The Supreme Court has told State Electricity Regulatory Commissions (SERCs) and power distribution companies (DISCOMs) to:
    • Clear old regulatory assets in 4 years.
    • Settle new ones within 3 years.
    • Keep regulatory assets below 3% of Annual Revenue Requirement (ARR).
    • Publish clear recovery plans and conduct regular audits.

HIGHLIGHTS

What are Regulatory Assets?

  • Regulatory assets = deferred costs.
  • They arise when the cost to supply electricity (ACS) is more than the money earned (ARR).
  • Example: If it costs ₹7.20/unit to supply but revenue is only ₹7.00/unit → 20 paisa loss per unit.
  • Instead of raising tariffs suddenly, the gap is recorded as a “regulatory asset” to be recovered later, often with interest.

Why Do Gaps Happen?

  • Tariffs not matching real costs.
  • State governments delaying subsidies for farmers or poor households.
  • Sudden rise in coal or fuel costs.

Impact on Consumers

  • Initially, consumers enjoy stable tariffs.
  • Later, they face steeper hikes because deferred costs + interest must be recovered.
  • Example: In Delhi, recovery of existing assets could mean ₹5.5/unit extra if done at once.

Impact on DISCOMs

  • Cash flow problems → delay in paying power generators.
  • Heavy borrowing → rising debt.
  • Less money left to modernize grids or adopt renewable energy.
  • This creates a vicious cycle of losses.

Way Forward

  • Tariffs must reflect real costs, with targeted subsidies for the poor.
  • Timely release of subsidies by State governments.
  • Automatic adjustment of tariffs when fuel costs change.
  • Strict monitoring by regulators to ensure discipline.