Thursday, April 16, 2026
News

Power demand recovery still elusive, utilities to see modest March quarter bottom line growth: Nuvama

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

New Delhi | April 15, 2026 9:22:24 AM IST
India's power demand recovery remains elusive, with growth staying muted in Q4FY26 amid an extended monsoon and slow start to summer, even as the sector looks to FY27 for a potential pickup. According to Nuvama's latest report on India's power sector, demand rose just 1.9% YoY in Q4FY26 and was largely flat for the full year, setting up a subdued base for thermal utilities heading into the next fiscal.

Nuvama expects modest profit after tax growth across its power coverage universe in Q4FY26. "We reckon Nuvama's power coverage universe shall post modest PAT growth in Q4FY26, driven by weak Plant Load Factor across utilities," the report said.

"India's power demand remained muted for yet another quarter (Q4FY26 growth: 1.9% YoY) with Mar-26 demand rising 0.7% YoY," the report said. "FY26 demand remained largely flat (+0.8% YoY) with extended monsoon/a slow start to summer adding to woes." Power demand grew to 150BU in Mar-26 and 426BU/1,715BU in Q4FY26/FY26, "largely affected by extended monsoon/slow start to summer and likely weak industrial output."

Peak demand did improve to ~245GW in Q4FY26 from ~238GW in Q4FY25, up 2.9% YoY. However, thermal plant load factors remained under pressure. "Thermal PLF remained low at ~70% in Mar-26 (73.4% in Mar-25) with most utilities posting muted PLFs in Q4FY26," Nuvama noted. NTPC reported PLF of 76.7% in Q4FY26 versus 82.7% in Q4FY25, while Tata Power posted 63% versus 72.9% YoY. Overall thermal PLF was muted at 69.8% in Q4FY26, down from 73.4% a year ago.

The supply-demand equation is diverging between solar and non-solar hours. "Solar-hour supply outpaced demand with negligible deficiency (IEX prices declined to INR3.3/unit in Mar-26 versus INR3.7/unit in Feb-26) while non-solar hours reported stronger demand and reduced supply (prices at INR5.3/unit in Mar-26 versus INR3.4/unit in Feb-26)," the report said. IEX electricity volume grew 23.5% YoY in Mar-26 and 24% YoY in Q4FY26, led by strong RTM growth. Total volume, including REC, grew ~34% YoY in Mar-26 and 21% YoY in Q4FY26.

The renewable pipeline remains strong, offering medium-term visibility. "RE Tendering pipeline as on Mar-26 remains elevated at ~368GW, largely driven by solar + storage (~65% of total tenders). Total RE addition of ~43GW YTD (till Feb-26)," Nuvama noted.

Going forward, a normal monsoon and a pickup in industrial activity will be key to reviving power demand growth in FY27. Until then, utilities with regulated equity growth, strong commissioning, and improving plant availability are better placed. Thermal PLFs remain the key monitorable, along with non-solar hour prices on exchanges, which indicate tightening supply when solar generation drops off. If summer sets in earlier next year, both demand and PLFs could see a cyclical rebound off a low base. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE BUSINESS NEWS
Steel to stay costly through 2026, India...
Markets stare at a positioning reset on ...
Gallant Sports Marks 10 Years with Natio...
TiECon Mysuru 2026 Set to Put Mysuru on ...
For the First Time Ever, BGMI Redeem Cod...
Mumbai-Based R2VFX Studios Delivers Visu...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
BJP will form government by winning over...
'BJP trying to take political advantage ...
Andhra Pradesh: 8 killed, 12 injured aft...
New Gecko species Cyrtodactylus Jayadity...
Union Health Ministry hosts first BRICS ...
Police arrest four accused so far in Amr...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
"The Iranian team is coming for sur... 
Trump's top aide says US blockade "... 
DMK's Kanimozhi moves motion in LS ... 
"US, 'Zionist regime' have no regar... 
Arsenal advance to UCL semi-finals ... 
"BJP will win all five seats in Ali... 
"EC can check anyone's movement, ca... 
Kurnool accident: President Murmu e...