This is because the Delhi Electricity Regulatory Commission has allowed distribution companies (discoms) to recover dues from the years when retail tariff increase was disallowed -- referred to as regulatory assets.
The regulator has worked out a plan to allow the city’s three private discoms recovery of dues totalling Rs 8,000 crore (Rs 80 billion) over eight years beginning 2014-15.
As part of this, the discoms will recover Rs 1,671 crore (Rs 16.71 billion) of RAs from consumers through tariff in the first year.
The overall scheme is to liquidate the Rs 11,431 crore (Rs 114.31 billion) of RAs -- recognised but unrecovered revenues -- as on March 2012.
The move will help the discoms raise additional financial resources from banks but also increase consumers’ tariff burden.
“The annual instalments allowed to be liquidated are Rs 424 crore (Rs 4.24 billion) for BSES Yamuna Pvt Ltd, Rs 769 crore (Rs 7.69 billion) for BSES Rajdhani Pvt Ltd and Rs 478 crore (Rs 4.78 billion) for Tata Power Delhi Distribution Ltd,” DERC said in a March 1 letter to the three discoms.
A senior DERC official confirmed the development.
“The instalments for recovering RAs will be part of the tariff order.
“It may not lead to substantial increase in tariff. In fact, discoms have asked for only fuel cost recovery through surcharge and not any tariff hike for next financial year,” he said.
The commission’s letter added the final estimate of revenue gap and the liquidation schedule might vary, depending on the outcome of a Comptroller and Auditor General audit of discoms, as ordered by the Delhi government, and an ongoing hearing at the Appellate Tribunal of Electricity, besides the impact of final capital cost recovery for the period between 2007 and 2012.
Kejriwal had on December 31 announced a 50 per cent tariff reduction through subsidy and a CAG audit of the discoms’ books, kicking off a major controversy over power supply in the capital.
The discoms challenged the audit in the Delhi High Court and the controversy turned
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