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CEA roadmap targets 100% fixed cost recovery from commercial users, 25% from households

Emphasising that current retail tariffs fail to reflect actual utility expenses, the CEA has come out with a comprehensive report highlighting a severe mismatch in how power infrastructure is funded.

Electricity bills across India could see a sweeping structural overhaul over the next five years, with the Central Electricity Authority (CEA) recommending a phased hike in fixed charges to rescue financially strained power distribution companies (Discoms). The CEA came out with far-reaching recommendations on rationalising fixed costs after intensive meetings with core industry stakeholders, including the All India Discom Association (AIDA) and consumer advocacy group Prayas. The authority has suggested that the final recommendations can now be taken up with the Forum of Regulators for pan-India implementation.Emphasising that current retail tariffs fail to reflect actual utility expenses, the CEA has come out with a comprehensive report highlighting a severe mismatch in how power infrastructure is funded. The authority has pointed out that there is a “significant gap” between the fixed costs borne by the Discoms and the fixed charges recovered from the consumers.“While fixed costs, such as thermal generator payments, transmission costs, employee salary and infrastructure maintenance account for 38-56 per cent of a Discom’s total annual revenue requirement (ARR), the fixed charges currently contribute only 9-20 per cent of their total revenue. This gap highlights the structural divergence between cost incidence and tariff recovery mechanisms,” the CEA report emphasised.fiscal chasmTo bridge this fiscal chasm, the report recommended creating a uniform framework for calculating fixed costs, which should be adopted by all States to ensure consistency, transparency and cost reflectivity in tariff design. The authority specified that this fixed cost component should cleanly include power purchase cost, transmission charges, load despatch centre charges and distribution costs, which includes return on equity, interest on loan, depreciation, operations and maintenance expenses and interest on working capital.To execute this transition without shocking retail consumers, the CEA has proposed a smooth, phased increase in fixed charges for retail tariffs over the next five years. Under this structural adjustment roadmap, the authority targets a fixed cost recovery goal of 25 per cent for domestic and agricultural consumers by 2030. Conversely, a stricter 100 per cent recovery target is proposed for institutional, industrial and commercial consumers during the same time period.simplified billingTo streamline billing across diverse regional boundaries, the apex body has advocated for a simplified billing structure. “Shift all States to standardised two-part tariffs, charging low tension (LT) consumers in Rs per kilowatt (kW) per month and high tension categories in Rs per Kilovolt Amperes (kVA),” the CEA suggested.Crucially, the CEA’s fiscal restructuring leans heavily into changing how rooftop solar adoption is integrated into the grid economy. The report recommends establishing entirely separate tariff categories for net metering consumers.Net metering allows a consumer to generate their own solar power and sell surplus electricity back to the local Discom. However, the CEA explains that part of the fixed costs incurred by Discoms is currently recovered through energy charges. Net metering disrupts this revenue recovery as these consumers offset their import from the grid during non-solar hours with export during solar hours at full retail rates.Defining separate tariff categories for net metering consumers, with differentiated fixed charges and time of day tariffs, recognises their unique grid integration, which involves selling solar power and drawing electricity from the grid, while aligning incentives with system needs, the report emphasised.The authority noted that this targeted pricing strategy is already picking up legislative momentum regionally. “This is gaining traction in states such as Maharashtra, Delhi and Tamil Nadu for rooftop solar users. Accordingly, separate fixed, variable and ToD tariffs need to be considered for net metering consumers as well,” the report proposed.Published on June 9, 2026