Maharashtra’s solar bungle
State is punishing clean energy to save inefficient and corrupt utilities
By all accounts, Maharashtra’s solar train
was chugging along nicely. With 18 GW of installed solar and wind energy
capacity, it ranks third, behind only Rajasthan and Gujarat. It overtook Tamil
Nadu last year. Its total renewable power capacity has increased nearly 160% in
the last decade. The state now produces about 40 million units of electricity
daily through renewable sources. The renewables constitute a third of total
energy mix with plans to take it to over half by 2030 and two thirds in another
10 years.
Then, suddenly Maharashtra started to apply
brakes on solar generation. At least on some parts of it. While it remains
supportive of pure play solar generation projects, it has stopped looking
kindly at rooftop solar power. It has come up with several measures that seek
to significantly increase cost for rooftop generators. The worst of these leave
out small household installations for the moment, targeting larger ones of 10KW
or more. These will mainly affect businesses and industry for whom rooftop
generation was emerging as a major relief from state’s stiff power tariffs.
To begin with, Maharashtra imposed grid
support charges of Rs 1.42 to Rs 1.96 per unit on such producers. These charges
are not confined to surplus units fed into the grid but on entire generation, a
bulk of which is consumed inhouse by the generator. Yes, rooftop plants do need
the grid, and it is fair that they contribute towards its maintenance as well.
But they already do so through paying basic fixed charges. Mahadiscom also
takes their surplus power at dirt cheap rate and sells them at profit.
They pay the commercial or industrial rates
for power they purchase from the grid. It would have made some sense if the
charges were limited to units exported to the grid. Levying it on internally
consumed units is akin to NHAI levying toll on an industry’s vehicles plying
within its own premises because the plant relies on a nearby highway to get raw
materials and send finished goods.
It does not stop there. A new policy is
proposing an electricity duty, again on entire generation, not just on exported
units. It is like levying GST on something you make and consume at home. Then
there are other measures like meagre price that distribution utility,
Mahadiscom, pays for surplus units generated by rooftop plants. At Rs 2.85/unit,
it is way below what the utility charges the same consumers for the power it
supplies to them. Government is also insisting that large rooftop plants deploy
their own battery storage that will push up the cost significantly.
It has also started capping the sanctioned
rooftop capacity to a consumer’s average consumption of last 12 months. This
has restricted setting up of larger plants by households who may be planning to
upgrade their lifestyle by having ACs and dishwashers or those wanting to buy
EVs in future. Together these measures threaten to undo a decade of progress
achieved by the state in moving towards clean power. They also threaten to
jeopardize national greenhouse emission targets.
So why is the state doing it? The reasons
are obvious. The state wants to protect the revenue of Mahadiscom and its
generation sibling the Mahagenco. These are notoriously corrupt, inefficient
and always bankrupt companies. They are bleeding money. To be fair, the growth
in rooftop solar generation has hurt Mahadiscom. Many of its best consumers —
the urban affluent and middle class, the big commercial complexes, and the
industries — have all started paying it substantially less thanks to cheap
solar power they generate and consume. For years they made up for Mahadiscom’s
losses on account of power theft and subsidized farm sector. Now that gravy
train is slowing down if not coming to a halt.
With the state in dire financial straits
because of Ladki Bahin like schemes, it can no longer support power utilities. Maharashtra’s
problem is real, but the remedy it has come up with is worse than the disease.
Rooftop solar is a necessary and important component of future energy mix. By
generating power at the point of consumption, it reduces expenditure on
transmission infrastructure. It also reduces need for land for central solar
plants as every building can potentially produce some power. Most importantly,
it is a cheap and effective way of cutting greenhouse gases that imperil the
very existence of humanity.
For Maharashtra to go this route is
specially confusing. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has taken personal
interest in getting many large-scale new energy industries to Maharashtra,
especially near his hometown Nagpur. It is strange for his government to
promote manufacture of solar panels and batteries on the one hand and
discourage their use on the other. If anything, his government should be
encouraging as much rooftop solar generation as possible. As the ongoing
geopolitical situation proves, reliance on imported fossil fuel keeps us
vulnerable. Continued use of dirty coal is not an option because it is main
reason behind India having the world’s worst air quality.
It is simply foolish to restrict new and
clean industry to protect an old and polluting one. Instead, the state should
be doubling down on more solar and wind generation. It should be encouraging
every house and building owner to install as much solar capacity as possible
and buy all their surplus power at attractive rates. With every sector of
economy electrifying, power demand will explode. It will be a win-win for all.
The question of loss making discom and
genco is real but that should be addressed by doing the hard work of improving
distribution infrastructure and curbing theft. State requires Mahadiscom to
supply virtually free power to farms. It must compensate the company separately
for it. Mahagenco should also move from its old thermal plants towards new
solar and wind plants with battery and pumped storage. Maharashtra deserves a
forward-looking energy policy, not one that goes backward.
This column appeared in Lokmat Times on Apr 30, 2026

well said sir
ReplyDeleteThanks!
DeleteTrue
ReplyDeleteCommercial sector should be promoted to produce more. So even if a part of it is susidised to farmer's it will be sustainable for the Government.The production cost for thermal power is too high to be susidised or given free.
ReplyDeleteThat's a good idea.. Thanks!
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