Understanding the Bidirectional Advantage
Installing solar panels is only half the battle; integrating them with the local grid is where the real financial savings happen. In Mumbai, utility providers like Adani Electricity and Tata Power require you to install a ‘Net Meter’. Unlike a traditional unidirectional meter, a net meter spins both ways. It tracks the electricity you pull from the grid at night and the surplus solar electricity you export to the grid during peak afternoon hours.
The Net Metering Application Workflow
Securing a net meter requires strict adherence to Central Electricity Authority (CEA) safety standards, ensuring that your solar setup does not pose a backfeed electrocution risk to utility workers during grid outages.
- Step 1: Feasibility Clearance. Before purchasing solar panels, you must submit a technical line diagram of your proposed system to Adani or Tata Power. They verify if the local distribution transformer can absorb your exported power.
- Step 2: CEIG Approval. If your solar installation exceeds 10kW, you must obtain a safety certificate from the Chief Electrical Inspector to Government (CEIG) before proceeding.
- Step 3: Work Completion Report. Once the panels and inverters are installed, your licensed electrical contractor submits a completion report confirming anti-islanding protection is active (this automatically shuts off your solar export when the main grid fails).
- Step 4: Meter Testing and Installation. The utility company procures a bidirectional meter, tests it in their lab, and schedules an installation visit.
How Your Bill is Calculated
Under the net metering framework, your bill is a simple calculation: (Total Units Imported) – (Total Units Exported) = Net Units Billed.
If you export more than you import in a billing cycle, the surplus units are carried forward as a credit to your next month’s bill. At the end of the financial year, if you still have a net surplus, the utility company compensates you at a pre-determined ‘Average Pooling Cost’ (usually much lower than the retail tariff, often around ₹2.50 to ₹3.00 per unit).
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I go off-grid and avoid net metering entirely?
Yes, but you will need massive, expensive battery banks to store your daytime power for nighttime use, significantly reducing the ROI of your solar investment.
What is Anti-Islanding Protection?
It is a mandatory safety mechanism in your solar inverter that instantly stops exporting power to the grid during a power cut, preventing linemen from being electrocuted while fixing the wires.
How much does a Net Meter cost?
The cost of the bidirectional meter is usually borne by the consumer and ranges from ₹3,000 for single-phase to ₹8,000 for three-phase, added to your next electricity bill.
Can I apply for net metering if I live in an apartment?
Technically yes, if you have exclusive terrace rights and society NOC, but practically, roof space in Mumbai apartments is usually designated as common property.
Does net metering work during a power cut?
No. Due to anti-islanding safety protocols, a standard grid-tied solar system with a net meter will shut down entirely during a power cut, even if the sun is shining, unless you have a hybrid inverter with battery backup.