Consumers will have to pay up to 30 paise per unit
The Haryana Electricity Regulation Commission (HERC) has changed the tariff from April 1, which will now make electricity in the state. The rates for domestic and industrial categories will increase by 20 to 30 paise per unit – technically KWH (KWH). Rate for domestic consumers was increased by 20 paise per kWh. In a plate of 0 to 50 units, the rate is now revised from Rs 2 per kWh to Rs 2.20 per kWh. In 51-100 unit plate, the rate increased from Rs 2.50 per kWh to Rs 2.70 per kWh. Consumers who have consumed more than 100 units per month (in plates of 0-150 units) will have to pay from Rs 2.75 to Rs 2.95 per kWh. The official statement claimed: “In addition, this new tariff structure immediately offers relief to the families by eliminating the burden of minimum monthly fee (MMC). Two-part tariff system has been set, with no flat fee for domestic consumers with monthly energy consumption to 300 units. Tariff is still the lowest in domestic consumers.” Meanwhile, the pace for sheets of 151-300 units Rs 5.25 per kWh is; 6.45 per kWh for 301 to 500 units; And for the consumption of more than 500 units, it will be Rs 7.10 per kWh. The power regulator also added a new category for consumers with more than 5 kW. In 0 to 500 units category, the rate was set at Rs 6.50 per kWh, followed by Rs 7.15 per kWh for 501 to 1,000 units and Rs 7.50 per kWh for more than 1,000 units. In addition, a fixed charge was charged at a rate of Rs 50 per kW in plates of more than 301 to 500 and 500 units. For the industrial sector, the rate in the supply category at 11 KVAH was revised to Rs 6.65 per KVAH (KWVILT Campier Hour) to Rs 6.95 per KVAH. In addition, the fix load in this category is increased from Rs 165 per kva (Kilowolt ampere) per month to Rs 290 per KVA per month. To help farmers, MMC was reduced from Rs 200 per BHP per year to Rs 180/144 per BHP per year for the agricultural class with meter connections, which are according to the burden. Herc reduced the revenue difference from Rs 4,520 crore to Rs 3,262 crore for FY 2025-26. The retail stock schedule was revised after seven years (FY 2017-18) and was increased due to irregular increase in fuel fees and other inflation parameters. Share this story -tags