
KSEB's move to impose fixed charge on solar ‘prosumers' challenged in HC
According to the petitioners, the decision is arbitrary and illegal. 'Prosumers,' who invest significantly in renewable energy infrastructure, are being unfairly treated on a par with other consumers.
'Not KSEB supply'
They said that the electricity generated and immediately consumed within their premises belongs solely to the prosumer and does not constitute a supply from KSEB though the solar grid is connected to the KSEB grid. It was akin to charges being levied on the energy not supplied by KSEB.
The petitioners contended that no specific provision had been made in the Electricity Act, 2003, or any tariff order approved by the Kerala State Electricity Regulatory Commission (KSERC) which empower the KSEB to impose a fixed charge on the self-consumed energy. Therefore, the decision is arbitrary, unauthorised, and violative of the statutory provisions. The petitioners also said that the demand for security deposits calculated on total consumption, including self-generated energy, is illegal.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
4 hours ago
- The Hindu
Delay in appointing scientific officers, staff in forensic science labs: Kerala HC seeks report
The Kerala High Court has sought a report from the District Judiciary Registrar of the High Court regarding the pendency of criminal trials in the State owing to the delay in appointing scientific officers and other staff in forensic science laboratories. The Bench consisting of Chief Justice Nitin Jamdar and Justice C. Jayachandran issued the order while considering a petition filed by Kerala State Legal Services Authority (KeLSA) seeking a directive to the State government and the Kerala Public Service Commission (KPSC) to recruit adequate number of scientific assistants in the forensic labs. The KeLSA alleged that the vacancies and the failure to appoint scientific assistants in the labs adversely impacted the conduct of trials, particularly in Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) and Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) cases. The KeLSA also referred to delays in appointing special public prosecutors in POCSO courts. The PSC's counsel said that there were procedural requirements and inherent time lag involved in appointments. Stating that continued inaction would affect Kerala's criminal justice system, the court directed the government and the PSC to coordinate and ensure that the vacancies are filled without delay.


The Hindu
5 hours ago
- The Hindu
Kerala HC dismisses petition filed by teacher charged under POCSO Act
Stating that an acquittal in a criminal case does not automatically lead to the setting aside of a departmental inquiry and the consequential proceedings, the Kerala High Court on Thursday dismissed a petition filed by a schoolteacher who was charged under the POCSO Act for alleged sexual assault of a 10-year-old student in classroom. The petitioner who was an Arabic teacher at a school in Malappuram and was placed under suspension following the registration of the FIR over a year ago, approached the court, seeking that a departmental inquiry report and the consequential proceedings following the incident be set aside. Among other reasons, he said that he had been acquitted in the criminal trial, after the survivor and her mother 'turned hostile'. 'Benefit of doubt' Referring to the ancient education system in India where teachers were known as 'rishis', and the 'rishi ashram' was a veritable 'gurukul' where students were loved and cared for as members of the guru's family, the Bench of Justice D.K. Singh said the petitioner was acquitted in the criminal case on the benefit of doubt. Even if a person is acquitted in a criminal trial, the same would not necessarily lead to discharge in a domestic inquiry. Being her teacher, the petitioner had a fiduciary relationship with the survivor. The crime is grossly unbecoming of a schooteacher. The petitioner teacher was accused of sexually assaulting the student since January 2023 while she was reading standing near the petitioner in the classroom. The Wandoor police filed an FIR in 2024, under provisions of the POCSO Act and the IPC after being alerted by the headmaster. The child had told her mother about the assault and she informed the headmaster.


The Hindu
5 hours ago
- The Hindu
Kerala HC extends interim order restraining arrest of ED officer
The Kerala High Court on Thursday extended an interim order issued by it restraining the arrest of Sekhar Kumar, an Assistant Director of the Enforcement Directorate (ED), in connection with a case relating to the alleged demand of ₹2 crore as bribe from a Kollam-based cashew businessman to extricate him from a money-laundering case, until the pronouncement of the final order. Mr. Kumar had filed an anticipatory bail petition before the court, claiming his innocence and alleging that he was falsely implicated in the case with ulterior motives. He contended that the businessman somehow wanted to wriggle out of the probe that had been initiated against him by the ED for allegedly siphoning off ₹24 lakh and that the Vigilance case against him was part of a bid by the businessman to escape legal action.