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HomeExplainersElectricity (Amendment) Bill, 2025: India’s attempt at third generation power reforms

MC EXPLAINER Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2025: India’s attempt at third generation power reforms

The move is likely to see opposition from some states as they fear it would reduce their control over the power sector. The Ministry of Power, however, stated that government discoms will continue to operate alongside private licensees in a regulated, level-playing environment.

October 31, 2025 / 17:03 IST
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The Draft Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2025, released by the Indian government this month to seek feedback from the public, proposes sweeping reforms to open up the power distribution sector to competition, phase out cross-subsidies, and strengthen regulatory accountability to improve efficiency and financial sustainability of India’s electricity system.

“Once passed and implemented, the law could mark the start of a third-generation reform in India’s power sector — after the 1990s unbundling and the 2003 Electricity Act — turning electricity from a public utility into a consumer-driven service. Such a reform is needed to achieve India’s ambition of becoming a developed nation by 2047,” said a government official involved in drafting the Bill who is not authorised to speak to the media.

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After the public consultation phase, the Bill will be sent to the Union Cabinet for approval and thereafter the Indian Parliament to get it passed in the lower and upper Houses. To be sure, the government introduced a similar Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2022 in August 2022, but it was referred to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Energy shortly thereafter.

The draft Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2025 released in October is broader and more evolved, building on lessons from the 2022 version and subsequent feedback from states and stakeholders, the official quoted above said.