Central Electricity Authority of India

Central Electricity Authority
केन्द्रीय विद्युत प्राधिकरण
Industry Electricity and Power
Headquarters Sewa Bhawan, R. K. Puram, Sector-1, New Delhi, India
Key people
Shri S.D. Dubey (I/c)
(Chairperson)
Products Electricity
Owner Government of India
Website cea.nic.in

The Central Electricity Authority of India (CEA) is a statutory organisation constituted under section 3(1) of Electricity Supply Act 1948, which has been superseded by section 70(1) of the Electricity Act 2003. The CEA advises the government on matters relating to the National Electricity Policy and formulates short-term and perspective plans for the development of electricity systems.

Responsibilities

Under the Electricity Act 2003, CEA prescribes the standards on matters such as construction of electrical plants, electric lines and connectivity to the grid, installation and operation of meters and safety and grid standards.[1]:259 The CEA is also responsible for concurrence of hydro power development schemes of central, state and private sectors taking into consideration the factors which will result in efficient development of the river and its tributaries for power generation, consistent with the requirement of drinking water, irrigation, navigation and flood control.

Preparation of technical standards for construction of electrical plants, electric lines and connectivity to the grid is the responsibility of CEA as per section 73 (b) of the Electricity Act, 2003.[2] However as per section 7 of this Act, a generating company may establish, operate and maintain a generating station if it complies with the technical standards only relating to connectivity to the grid as given in clause (b) of section 73. This implies that generating stations need not follow compulsory the CEA technical standards specified for construction of electrical plants and electric lines. Similarly, transmission / distribution licensees need not implement compulsory the standards for construction of electric lines except the Grid Code/ Grid Standards for the operation and maintenance of transmission lines specified by CEA under clause 73 (d) of this Act. Many times, these CEA standards are conservative compromising optimum design features /cost/ utility and also do not give full clarity in selection of the system / sub system capabilities of electrical plants and electric line.

The CEA plays a lead role in promoting the integrated operations of the regional power grids and the evolution of a national grid. The eastern, western and north-eastern grids have been integrated and are operating in a synchronous mode. The eastern grid is connected to the northern as well as southern grid through HVDC back to back links. The western grid is also connected to the northern and southern grid through similar arrangements. The CEA facilitates exchange of power within the country from surplus to deficit regions and with neighbouring countries for mutual benefits.[1]:260

The CEA advises central government, state governments and regulatory commissions on all technical matters relating to generation, transmission and distribution of electricity. It also advises state governments, licensees or generating companies on matters which enable them to operate and maintain the electricity system under their ownership or control in an improved manner.[1]:259

CEA responsibility also includes reliable data collection/ management/dissemination of the power sector. However, there is major mismatches (CEA data is nearly 5% more than NLDC data) in the basic electricity data given by CEA and NLDC as shown below.

Electricity generation (MU) data at national level in the year 2015-16 [3][4]
Data CEA NLDC Remarks
Total generation1,107,822 1,106,236 CEA electricity generation figure excludes non conventional power generation but includes imports from Bhutan. NLDC data termed as 'energy met at national level' which includes non conventional utility generation and net electricity imports.
Hydro 121,376 131,862 NLDC data may include small hydro power generation. CEA data does not include small hydro generation which is part of non conventional utility electricity generation.
Non conventional sources na 28,604 Only wind generation data given by NLDC. Total figure including generation from solar, biomass, etc. not given. If the past years generation data is observed, the total generation from non conventional energy sources is nearly 60,000 MU. na → data not available.
Imports 5,244 5,557 Electricity is imported from Bhutan
Exportsna 5,124 Electricity is exported to Nepal and Bangladesh
Energy met in India 1,102,698 1,106,236 For CEA, it is 'Total generation' minus 'Exports' excluding generation by non conventional energy sources. The difference between NLDC and CEA data should be nearly 60,000 MU higher but the difference is only marginal which is a major discrepancy in the data.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 India Yearbook 2007. Publications Division, Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, Govt. Of India. 2007. ISBN 81-230-1423-6.
  2. "The Electricity Act, 2003" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2013. Retrieved 21 September 2013.
  3. "See CEA monthly 'Generation Overview Report - Actual' for March 2016". Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  4. "See NLDC monthly reports of 2015-16". Retrieved 21 April 2016.

External links

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