Delhi High Court today asked the government to consider as a representation a power company's plea seeking clarification on whether it intended to cap the fixed charge component of the rate of electricity generated from plants which won coal blocks in the recent auction.
The proposed ceiling would bar thermal power plants, which have succesfully bid for coal blocks, from increasing tariff on the electricity generated by them.
A bench of justices B D Ahmed and Sanjeev Sachdeva asked the Power Ministry to consider the petition of Mandakini Exploration and Mining Ltd, joint venture (JV) of Jindal India Thermal Power Ltd (JITPL) and Monnet Power Company Ltd, as a representation and dispose it of by April 15.
More From This Section
With these directions, the court disposed of the plea of the company in which JITPL holds 73 per cent stake and Monnet the rest. The JV had successfully bid for and was allotted Mandakini coal block in Odisha.
In its plea, the company said it had come to know from reports that the government proposed to cap the fixed charge component of rate of electricity generated by companies which successfully bid for the mines earmarked for the power sector.
Such a move, it said, "will amount to ex post facto change in bidding conditions of coal mines for power sector" and would render the entire project "unviable".
The JV company contended that "bidding for a mine was based on the assumption that costs would be factored in the fixed charge".