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Reliance Infra, an Indian company, will recover $3.25 billion from New Delhi's consumers in unpaid electricity dues

Reliance Infrastructure, an Indian company, said that its New Delhi electricity distribution units would recover 284.83 billion rupees (3.25 billion dollars) in unpaid debts following a Supreme Court ruling this week.

Dues are due because of historical tariff shortfalls where the electricity prices approved by regulators didn't fully cover costs.

The amount will be recovered by consumers in four years, starting April 2024. This is likely to happen through increased electricity rates.

The Supreme Court of India ordered on Wednesday that all electricity regulators in India clear any deferred payments and unpaid bills owed by power distribution companies.

The court also ordered state regulators conduct audits and to submit recovery plans.

Reliance Infra belongs to the Anil Ambani Reliance Group. He is the younger sibling of Mukesh Ambani, a billionaire.

According to a court document, in New Delhi, three distribution companies, including a Tata Power unit, had accrued 272 billion rupees of unpaid dues by the end of fiscal year 2021. These had to be settled within four years, starting April 2024.

The Delhi Electricity Regulatory Commission (DERC) will supervise the recovery process. This is expected to lead to higher electricity bills in the capital. Reporting by Sethuraman NR, New Delhi. Editing by Sonia Cheema.

(source: Reuters)