Group Captive Structure Explained: How Multiple Industries Can Share One Power Plant

Group Captive Structure Explained: How Multiple Industries Can Share One Power Plant
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The group captive model is one of the most powerful — and most misunderstood — structures in Indian power procurement. Done correctly, it lets a group of industrial consumers co-own a power plant and access electricity at close to generation cost, while sidestepping the cross-subsidy surcharge. Done incorrectly, it invites disputes and clawbacks.

What is a group captive plant?

Under the Electricity Rules, a captive generating plant is one set up to generate power primarily for the use of its owners. A group captive extends this to multiple consumers who collectively own the plant through a special purpose vehicle (SPV). Because the consumers are owners, the power is treated as self-consumed — and self-consumption is exempt from the cross-subsidy and additional surcharges that apply to ordinary open access.

The two non-negotiable conditions

To qualify as captive and retain the surcharge exemption, the structure must satisfy two tests on an ongoing basis:

  • The 26% equity rule: the captive consumers must collectively hold not less than 26% of the equity (with voting rights) in the SPV that owns the plant.
  • The 51% consumption rule: the captive consumers must collectively consume not less than 51% of the energy generated, in proportion to their shareholding (within the permitted variation band).

These are not one-time checks. Captive status is verified — and the proportionality of consumption to ownership must be maintained year on year, or the exemption can be lost retrospectively.

Key Takeaways

  • Group captive lets multiple consumers co-own a plant via an SPV.
  • Captive power is self-consumed — exempt from cross-subsidy and additional surcharge.
  • Consumers must hold ≥26% equity and consume ≥51% of generation, proportionally.
  • Compliance is verified annually; lapses can trigger retrospective surcharge demands.
  • Savings can be substantial, but structuring and governance are critical.

Why consumers choose it

The appeal is straightforward: by avoiding the cross-subsidy surcharge and accessing power near generation cost, group captive can deliver savings that pure open access cannot match in high-CSS states. It also provides long-term price certainty — valuable for energy-intensive industries exposed to volatile grid tariffs.

The risks to manage

The structure's benefits flow entirely from maintaining valid captive status. The main risks are:

  1. Consumption drift: if a consumer's actual offtake falls out of proportion with its shareholding, the captive test can fail.
  2. Equity changes: share transfers or exits that breach the 26% threshold jeopardise the whole group's status.
  3. Documentation gaps: annual certification and proper records are essential to defend the exemption.
  4. Exit complexity: a consumer leaving the SPV affects the proportionality for everyone else.

Is it right for you?

Group captive suits consumers with stable, predictable load who can commit to a long-term ownership relationship and disciplined governance. It is less suited to consumers with volatile demand or short planning horizons. The savings are among the best available in Indian power — but they are earned through careful structuring and sustained compliance, not just a signed agreement.

This article is provided for general informational purposes and reflects the regulatory landscape as understood at the time of publication. Power sector rules vary by state and change frequently. It does not constitute legal, financial, or regulatory advice. Consult Instant Reach for guidance specific to your project and jurisdiction.

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