Industrial tariff cross-subsidy: Tamil Nadu textile lobby seeks to shift costs to residential ratepayers
The Southern India Spinners Association asks the Tamil Nadu government to lower industrial power tariffs, which would likely shift costs onto residential and small-commercial customers through cross-subsidy.
The Southern India Spinners Association (SISPA) is asking the Tamil Nadu government to revisit industrial power tariffs to improve the competitiveness of the state's textile sector. In ratepayer terms, that means one thing: shifting costs from industrial customers onto your residential bill.
India's electricity tariffs are cross-subsidized — industrial and commercial users pay higher rates to offset subsidized rates for agriculture and residential consumers. When an industrial lobby demands a tariff cut, the missing revenue must come from somewhere. The most likely source: a higher cross-subsidy surcharge on residential and small-commercial bills, or a direct increase in the tariff for those classes.
The mechanism at play is the tariff order from the Tamil Nadu Electricity Regulatory Commission (TNERC). Every year, the commission sets tariffs for each customer class. The textile mills, which are large industrial consumers, currently pay a higher rate than the cost of service. SISPA wants that premium reduced, arguing that high power costs hurt exports and jobs. But the cross-subsidy is a policy choice — it protects residential ratepayers from the full cost of the grid. Cutting it for industry means residential bills rise or subsidies from the state budget increase.
The alternative: reduce the overall cost of supply by improving distribution efficiency, cutting transmission losses, and accelerating low-cost renewable generation. Until that happens, every industrial tariff cut is a residential rate increase in waiting.