CM Fadnavis: ₹25,000 Cr Power Grid Works to End DP Failures
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis announced on 24 June 2026 that power distribution infrastructure works worth ₹25,000 crore are under way across the state, with the explicit goal of bringing the Distribution Panel (DP) failure rate to zero percent. The announcement was made on the floor of the Vidhan Parishad in Mumbai during the ongoing Monsoon Session 2026.
Context
Addressing the upper house of the Maharashtra legislature, CM Fadnavis stated — in both English and Marathi — that the state is actively investing in strengthening its power distribution network. In Marathi, he said: 'डीपी बिघाडाचे प्रमाण शून्य टक्क्यांवर आणण्याच्या उद्देशाने वीज वितरण व्यवस्थेच्या बळकटीकरणासाठी ₹25,000 कोटींची पायाभूत सुविधा विकासाची कामे सुरू आहेत' [Infrastructure development works worth ₹25,000 crore are under way to strengthen the power distribution system with the aim of bringing the DP failure rate to zero percent].
Distribution Panels are critical junction points in the last-mile electricity supply chain. Their failure — particularly during the monsoon season — is a leading cause of prolonged outages in both urban neighbourhoods and rural Maharashtra, directly affecting millions of households and small businesses.
Policy Backdrop
The investment fits within a broader national push to modernise state electricity distribution utilities. The central government's Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme (RDSS), launched in 2021, provides conditional funding to state discoms for infrastructure upgrades, loss reduction, and smart metering. Maharashtra's primary distribution utility, Maharashtra State Electricity Distribution Company Limited (MSEDCL), has been a key participant in successive central schemes, including the earlier Ujjwal DISCOM Assurance Yojana (UDAY) introduced in 2015.
Indian states have pursued these schemes to cut aggregate technical and commercial (AT&C) losses and improve supply reliability. Maharashtra's stated focus on driving DP failure rates to zero aligns with the national goal of achieving 24x7 power supply for all consumers.
Stakeholders and Impact
The works, if executed as announced, would directly benefit electricity consumers across Maharashtra — spanning urban households in cities such as Mumbai, Pune, and Nagpur, as well as rural consumers who currently bear the brunt of monsoon-season outages triggered by DP failures. For small traders, farmers relying on pump sets, and industries dependent on uninterrupted supply, a zero-failure distribution network would represent a significant quality-of-life and productivity gain.
The Monsoon Session timing of the announcement is deliberate: legislators from constituencies across the state routinely raise power outage grievances during this period, and a capital-expenditure commitment of this scale signals the government's intent to address systemic — rather than seasonal — infrastructure gaps.
What's Next
The key measure of success will be whether the ongoing ₹25,000 crore works translate into a measurable reduction in DP failure incidents during the 2026 monsoon and in subsequent reporting periods. Legislative committees and the state's electricity regulator are expected to track implementation milestones. The next budget session will likely see the government presenting progress data on AT&C loss reduction and outage frequency as evidence of returns on the capital outlay.