City
Epaper

No electricity tariff hike in Andhra Pradesh for 2026-27

By IANS | Updated: March 25, 2026 21:50 IST

Amaravati, March 25 In a major relief to electricity consumers across Andhra Pradesh, the Andhra Pradesh Electricity Regulatory ...

Open in App

Amaravati, March 25 In a major relief to electricity consumers across Andhra Pradesh, the Andhra Pradesh Electricity Regulatory Commission (APERC), on Wednesday, approved no increase in electricity tariffs for 2026–27.

The state government said that the APERC's decision reaffirms its commitment to protecting households, farmers, and small businesses from rising power costs.

The Commission's order also includes the true-up/down and performance review of DISCOMs for 2024–25, following an extensive public consultation process.

While DISCOMs projected a revenue gap of Rs 17,508 crore, APERC approved a lower gap of Rs 15,790 crore, which will be fully supported by the state government.

This intervention ensures no tariff hike across all consumer categories, no additional burden through true-up charges and continued affordability and financial stability for consumers

According to an official statement, the order delivers wide-ranging benefits across sectors.

This has protected 1.13 crore domestic consumers from tariff increases while 22 lakh farmers will continue receiving free power supply.

As many as 22 lakh SC/ST and economically weaker households will receive free or subsidised electricity through direct benefit transfer (DBT) scheme.

Commercial tariffs have been reduced from Rs 12.25/unit to Rs 9.95/unit, benefiting about 2 lakh consumers.

Cottage industry load limit has been doubled from 10 HP to 20 HP, aiding 18,000 small enterprises.

To boost industrial activity and align with emerging sectors, APERC has introduced key structural changes, including new tariff subcategory for solar module manufacturing, promoting clean energy investments, reclassification of water purification plants and printing presses as industrial units, rationalisation of tariffs for utilities such as national highway street lighting and special provisions for poultry and seasonal processing industries.

The Commission rejected several proposals that would have increased consumer burden, including changes in time-of-day tariff structure, shift to non-telescopic billing for certain consumers and removal of green power category.

APERC has issued critical directions to DISCOMs to improve operational efficiency: They have been told to accelerate clearance of subsidy dues and government department arrears, implement strategies to minimise private arrears, enhance electrical safety measures, including public reporting systems via websites and WhatsApp and ensure compliance with national standards and The Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme targets.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIran says US violated ceasefire by targeting its oil tanker in Gulf of Oman, vows 'crushing response'

National"LoP not decided yet": LDF convenor TP Ramakrishnan dismisses leadership change claims after Keralam poll loss

InternationalTehran claims missile strike on American naval vessels after US attacked Iranian oil tanker

InternationalUS military strikes Iran's Qeshm Port, Bandar Abbas, reports Fox News

Cricket"Tough season, but important win": Mitchell Marsh reflects on his ton as LSG beats RCB

Business Realted Stories

BusinessOdisha secures Rs 48,330 crore investment commitments during CM Majhi’s Gujarat visit

BusinessWomen-led rural tourism can transform Buddhist circuits in NE: Arunachal Minister

BusinessCentre rejects ‘glut’ claims in Punjab mandis, says wheat lifting higher than last year

BusinessCommerce Ministry explores measures to boost global exposure for Indian exporters

BusinessWomen’s participation in India’s maritime sector jumps 340 pc since 2020: Sarbananda Sonowal