Solar Monitoring Company in Rajasthan — SLDC Scheduling, PM-KUSUM & AI-Powered Energy Management

20 GW installed capacity. India’s strictest SLDC scheduling requirements. The country’s most aggressive PM-KUSUM rollout. One platform built for all of it.

Rajasthan has crossed 20 GW of installed solar capacity — the highest of any Indian state — and the pressure on plant operators has never been greater. RRVUNL and SLDC Rajasthan require strict 15-minute block scheduling, and under CERC’s deviation settlement mechanism (DSM), missing your declared schedule by more than ±15% triggers penalty bands that can erode 5–8% of a plant’s monthly PPA revenue. Rajasthan also leads the country in PM-KUSUM Component A rollouts, with hundreds of ground-mount feeders now facing mandatory MNRE portal data submissions. Add the state’s relentless dust deposition rates to this picture, and the operational stakes are clear. EnerCog is the AI-powered solar monitoring platform built for exactly these conditions.

Solar Operators in Rajasthan Face These Challenges

RRVUNL Grid Scheduling and DSM Penalty Exposure

SLDC Rajasthan mandates day-ahead and intra-day schedule submissions to RRVUNL. Deviations beyond ±15% per 15-minute block trigger DSM penalties under CERC regulations.

  • ₹40,000–₹80,000 per week in penalties for a 2 MW plant at 80% PLF
  • Penalty bands start at ±15% deviation — no buffer for poor forecasting
  • Most SCADA systems log historical actuals only — no next-block prediction
  • No real-time forecasting engine at the plant edge = no proactive DSM management

The problem isn’t technical non-compliance. It’s the absence of a forecasting layer.

PM-KUSUM Component A: Compliance Gap at Scale

Rajasthan leads India in PM-KUSUM Component A — and RRECL is tightening audit checks fast.

  • 500 kW to 2 MW ground-mount feeders connected to agricultural 33/11 kV substations
  • RRECL requires MNRE-format submissions to the Rajasthan KUSUM portal
  • Most Component A plants operate with no dedicated monitoring system
  • Data manually compiled from inverter LCD panels or estimated from bills

Subsidy clawback exposure is growing — and the gap between scheme requirement and on-ground capability is closing fast.

Dust and Soiling: The Yield Killer in Rajasthan’s Semi-Arid Belt

The Jodhpur–Jaisalmer–Barmer belt delivers exceptional irradiance — and India’s highest dust deposition rates.

  • Irradiance above 5.5 kWh/m²/day — among the best solar resource in India
  • 3–6% output loss per panel left uncleaned for 10–14 days in peak summer
  • Calendar-based cleaning wastes water and labour — and misses actual soiling events
  • No soiling index means dust loss and equipment degradation look identical

In PPA performance audits and O&M reviews, that ambiguity is a direct liability.

How EnerCog Solves It for Rajasthan Solar Plants

EnerCog’s edge-to-cloud architecture is designed for the exact conditions that define Rajasthan’s solar landscape: high-variability multi-string plants, mixed inverter fleets, PM-KUSUM compliance obligations, and aggressive SLDC scheduling requirements.

SLDC-Aligned 15-Minute Generation Forecasting

EnerCog’s cloud AI delivers 96%+ generation forecast accuracy at 15-minute granularity — aligned to RRVUNL’s block schedule format.

  • Plant-specific model trained on your inverter strings, degradation curve, and local irradiance history
  • Rolling schedule output your team submits directly to SLDC — no manual formatting
  • Real-time deviation alerts when actual output tracks 10% below declaration — 5% before the DSM penalty band activates
  • Not a generic regional weather overlay — recalibrates continuously with live plant telemetry

Learn more about EnerCog’s SLDC forecasting platform.

Edge AI for Anomaly Detection and Soiling Index

The edge controller handles two problems simultaneously — inverter anomaly detection and sensorless soiling measurement.

  • RS485 auto-configuration connects to SMA, Huawei, ABB, Solis, Growatt, and others — no manual register mapping
  • 1-second sampling identifies string-level anomalies 70% faster than threshold-based SCADA alerts
  • Sensorless soiling index computed from string performance ratio data — no pyranometer required
  • Cleaning alerts trigger only when yield loss crosses a configurable threshold — not on a fixed calendar

No extra hardware. No sensor maintenance overhead.

PM-KUSUM Data Export to MNRE Portal

EnerCog handles the full PM-KUSUM data pipeline automatically — from 1-second inverter sampling to MNRE portal submission.

  • Auto-formats data in MNRE MIS portal format — timestamps, generation values, inverter-level metadata pre-populated
  • Aggregates 1-second data to 15-minute intervals for Rajasthan KUSUM portal compliance
  • Immutable timestamped audit trail meets RRECL’s three-year data retention requirement
  • For EPCs: compliance from day one — no separate monitoring system required

See our PM-KUSUM monitoring and compliance solution page for the full requirements breakdown.

Why Rajasthan Solar Operators Choose EnerCog

Three performance claims that matter in Rajasthan’s operating environment:

96%+ forecasting accuracy

At 15-minute granularity, aligned to SLDC Rajasthan schedules — directly reduces DSM penalty exposure.

70% faster anomaly detection

versus threshold-based SCADA systems — catches inverter faults and string-level degradation before they escalate to generation loss events.

Automatic PM-KUSUM data export

in MNRE portal format — eliminates manual reporting for Component A plants, removing the primary compliance bottleneck.

Frequently Asked Questions

RRVUNL (Rajasthan Rajya Vidyut Utpadan Nigam) is the state generation utility and the entity that interfaces with SLDC Rajasthan for grid scheduling. Solar plants above a specified capacity threshold are required to submit day-ahead and intra-day generation forecasts to RRVUNL, which then co-ordinates these with SLDC dispatch instructions. Deviations from declared schedules are settled under the CERC deviation settlement mechanism (DSM), with penalties applied in bands starting at ±15% deviation. Accurate forecasting and real-time plant monitoring are the primary tools for managing DSM exposure.

PM-KUSUM Component A covers ground-mount solar projects of 500 kW to 2 MW capacity, installed on barren or uncultivated land and connected to existing 33/11 kV substations via agricultural feeders. In Rajasthan, RRECL is the nodal agency for Component A implementation. Power generated is typically purchased by local DISCOMs at a tariff fixed under the scheme. Beneficiaries — which include farmers, cooperatives, and individual land owners — are required to submit generation data through the Rajasthan KUSUM portal in MNRE format. EnerCog automates this submission process.

RRECL requires Component A plants to provide continuous generation data including: gross and net generation (kWh) at 15-minute intervals, inverter-level performance parameters, plant availability percentage, and grid injection records aligned with DISCOM metering data. This data must be archived for a minimum of three years and made available for audit on request. EnerCog’s monitoring platform captures all required parameters at 1-second sampling, aggregates to the required intervals, and exports in the MNRE MIS portal format — with a built-in audit trail.

EnerCog uses a sensorless soiling detection algorithm that computes a string-level performance ratio from inverter telemetry alone. By comparing actual string output against a modelled baseline (derived from historical irradiance patterns and the plant’s own performance data), the algorithm identifies when output degradation is consistent with soiling rather than shading or equipment fault. This produces a soiling index that triggers O&M cleaning alerts when yield loss crosses a configurable threshold — typically 1.5–2.0% of daily generation. No pyranometer or irradiance sensor is required, reducing both hardware cost and maintenance overhead.

Yes. EnerCog’s edge controller uses RS485 auto-configuration to detect and connect to inverters from any manufacturer — SMA, Huawei, ABB, Solis, Growatt, Delta, Fronius — without manual Modbus register mapping. For large utility-scale plants in Rajasthan that commonly deploy multiple inverter brands across different phases of construction, this eliminates the integration bottleneck that typically delays monitoring system commissioning by weeks. Auto-configuration typically completes in under 2 hours for a 1–5 MW plant.


Running a solar plant in Rajasthan? Get EnerCog’s SLDC-compliant monitoring with built-in PM-KUSUM data export — no manual compilation, no DSM surprises.