Tata Power's wholly owned subsidiary Coastal Gujarat Power Ltd and Adani Power had originally moved the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) seeking higher tariff on the grounds that their input costs had gone up due to rupee devaluation and higher costs of coal imported from Indonesia, owing to a regulation passed by the Southeast Asian nation.
The apex court did not agree with the contentions of these firms which referred to the findings of the Appellate Tribunal for Electricity that rise in coal price consequent to change in the Indonesian law was a factor that entitled them to claim compensatory tariff.
"The fact that fuel supply agreement has to be appended to the PPA (power purchase argeement) is only to indicate that the raw material for the working of the plant is there and is in order," the court said in its 65-page verdict.
"It is clear that an unexpected rise in the price of coal will not absolve the generating companies from performing their part of the contract for the very good reason that when they submitted their bids, this was a risk they knowingly took," it said.
"In fact, it is clear on a reading of the PPAs as a whole that the price payable for the supply of coal is entirely for the person who sets up the power plant to bear," it noted.
"Consequently, we are of the view that neither clause 12.3 nor 12.7 of section 32 of the Contract Act, will apply so as to enable the grant of compensatory tariff to the respondents," it said.
"This being the case, we are of the view that though change in Indonesian law would not qualify as a change in law under the guidelines read with the PPA, change in Indian law certainly would," it said.
"The CERC will, as a result of this judgement, go into the matter afresh and determine what relief should be granted to those power generators which fall within clause 13 of the PPA as has been held by us in this judgment," the bench said.
Several power distribution companies in Rajasthan, Punjab and Maharashtra had moved the apex court challenging the electricity tribunal's decision which had held that power producers were entitled to compensatory tariff and referred the case to the CERC for calculating the compensatory tariff.
Referring to the order, Adani Power informed the BSE that the company will decide further course of action once the final order of the apex court is available to it.
It, however, said preliminary analysis reveals that the company will get benefit in respect of its PPA (1424 MW) to Haryana power distribution firms and PPA (3,300 MW) with such Maharashtra companies as also with PPA (1200 MW) with Rajasthan firms.
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