Industrial Solar and BESS Energy Management India — Cut Your Electricity Bill, Not Your Production

For a manufacturing plant or commercial facility in India, the electricity bill is not a fixed cost — it is a variable you can engineer.

  • Most industrial energy buyers focus on per-unit energy charge — the most visible line item
  • In reality, HT and LT industrial bills have three components: energy charges, maximum demand charges, and Time-of-Day rates
  • Maximum Demand charges alone typically represent 20–35% of the bill
  • Each component has a different optimisation lever — solar alone addresses only one

EnerCog’s industrial energy management platform attacks all three simultaneously.

How Indian Industrial Electricity Bills Are Actually Structured

Most industrial energy buyers focus on the per-unit (kWh) energy charge — the most visible line item. In reality, for HT and LT industrial consumers in India, the bill has three distinct components, each with a different optimisation lever:

Energy charges (kWh):

Per-unit cost of electricity consumed. Solar generation directly offsets this. For a plant running 8-hour shifts, 500 kW of rooftop solar can offset 30–40% of daytime energy consumption at zero marginal cost.

Maximum Demand charges (kVA or kW):

Billed on the highest demand recorded in the billing cycle, regardless of duration. A 10-minute startup surge that peaks at 800 kW sets the MD billing for the entire month — even if average consumption was 400 kW. MD charges typically represent 20–35% of an industrial electricity bill and respond to BESS-based peak shaving.

Time-of-Day (ToD) rates:

Most HT industrial consumers in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Rajasthan, and Gujarat are on ToD tariffs with peak rates 40–80% higher than off-peak rates. The peak tariff window (typically 6–10 AM and 6–10 PM) is also when grid solar generation is naturally lower. BESS charged during off-peak or solar surplus and discharged during peak tariff windows captures this rate differential as direct bill savings.

Optimising all three simultaneously is where the industrial energy economics become compelling.

  • Solar generation directly offsets per-unit energy charges at zero marginal cost
  • BESS peak shaving suppresses Maximum Demand readings — reducing 20–35% of the bill
  • ToD arbitrage captures the peak-to-off-peak rate differential as direct savings
  • EnerCog’s AI coordinates all three in real time — no manual setpoint changes

Each lever works independently. Together, they compound.

The Four-Asset Energy Stack EnerCog Manages

Most industrial facilities run solar, BESS, DG, and grid independently — because no single system manages them together.

  • Solar surplus beyond immediate load is curtailed or exported at low rates — not directed to BESS
  • BESS cycles on fixed timers — not against real-time tariff windows
  • DG and solar can conflict — reverse power flow risks alternator damage without active synchronisation
  • Grid import spikes go unchecked during peak-tariff windows

EnerCog changes this: one platform coordinates all four assets in real time.

Solar Generation

1-second solar output monitoring identifies clipping, string faults, and soiling loss in real time. Solar surplus beyond immediate consumption is directed to BESS charging — not curtailed or fed to the grid at low export rates.

BESS Dispatch

AI-scheduled charging during off-peak or solar surplus; discharge during MD peaks and ToD peak tariff windows. EnerCog manages the charge/discharge cycle automatically — no manual setpoint changes required as tariff windows shift seasonally.

DG Backup Integration

EnerCog’s DG-PV synchronisation prevents reverse power flow when solar generation exceeds DG output — protecting alternator winding from damage. Solar offsets DG fuel consumption; BESS provides ride-through during DG startup transitions.

Grid Import Management

EnerCog monitors grid import in real time and coordinates solar, BESS, and DG to minimise grid draw during high-tariff periods — reducing both energy charges and MD exposure simultaneously.

The Economics: What Cost Reduction Looks Like in Practice

The financial case for industrial solar-BESS in India is driven by three stacking savings streams.

  • Solar energy offset: 500 kW rooftop generates ~6.25 lakh kWh/year — worth ₹44–56 lakhs at HT tariffs
  • BESS peak shaving: 20–40% reduction in MD billing — ₹19–38 lakhs/year for a plant with ₹8 lakhs/month MD bill
  • ToD tariff arbitrage: 500 kWh BESS cycling daily captures ₹10–15 lakhs/year at current peak-to-off-peak differential
  • DG fuel reduction: solar-DG synchronisation reduces diesel consumption 40–70% during solar hours

For a mid-size facility with 500 kW solar, 500 kWh BESS, and DG backup, combined annual savings typically range ₹80 lakhs to ₹1.2 crores.

For a mid-size industrial facility with 500 kW solar, 500 kWh BESS, and a DG backup system, the combined annual savings across all four streams typically range from Rs. 80 lakhs to Rs. 1.2 crores. At current system costs, this translates to a payback period of 3–5 years on the BESS investment (solar is typically separate). EnerCog provides a pre-deployment savings model for your specific facility using your actual DISCOM tariff schedule and load profile.

How EnerCog Manages Your Industrial Energy System

Which Industries Benefit Most

Manufacturing (auto-components, textiles, food processing, pharmaceuticals):

High 24/7 or multi-shift loads with significant MD exposure. Solar offsets day-shift consumption; BESS manages MD during shift startup peaks. DG-PV synchronisation is relevant for plants with frequent grid outages.

Commercial real estate and large retail:

Peak HVAC load during morning and evening occupancy hours aligns perfectly with ToD peak tariff windows — BESS discharge during HVAC peaks captures both MD savings and tariff arbitrage simultaneously.

Cold storage and logistics:

Continuous compressor loads with predictable demand profiles are ideal for BESS peak shaving. Solar generation during the day offsets the highest-consumption period. ToD tariff arbitrage on overnight refrigeration cycles further reduces operating costs.

Educational institutions and hospitals:

Multiple buildings, multiple meters, and high daytime occupancy loads benefit from multi-site Clarity monitoring and centralised energy cost management across the campus.

Frequently Asked Questions

Maximum Demand (MD) charge is billed by Indian DISCOMs on the highest 15- or 30-minute kVA or kW demand recorded in the billing cycle — regardless of whether that peak lasted 10 minutes or 10 hours. For an HT industrial consumer, MD charges typically represent 20–35% of the total electricity bill. EnerCog monitors real-time demand load at 1-second resolution and dispatches BESS automatically when measured demand approaches the MD setpoint — keeping the recorded peak below the billing threshold and reducing MD charges by 20–40% for appropriately sized systems.

As of 2025, ToD tariffs for HT industrial consumers are mandatory or widely applicable in Maharashtra (MERC), Karnataka (KERC), Rajasthan (RERC), Gujarat (GERC), Tamil Nadu (TNERC), and Andhra Pradesh (APERC). Peak tariff windows typically run 6–10 AM and 6–10 PM, with peak-to-off-peak differentials ranging from Rs. 1.50 to Rs. 3/kWh depending on the state and consumer category. EnerCog Cortex is configured with your applicable DISCOM tariff schedule and automatically schedules BESS charge/discharge to capture the maximum tariff differential.

EnerCog Synapse monitors real-time output from solar inverters, BESS inverters, and DG alternators simultaneously at 1-second resolution. Cortex AI runs a dispatch optimisation that coordinates all three sources to minimise grid import cost — solar surplus charges BESS, BESS discharges during MD peaks and ToD windows, DG provides backup when grid and solar are both unavailable. The system prevents reverse power flow to DG alternators (which damages windings) and manages the transition between grid, solar, BESS, and DG modes automatically.

For a mid-size industrial facility in Maharashtra, Rajasthan, or Karnataka with 500 kW solar and 500 kWh BESS, the combined annual savings from solar energy offset, BESS peak shaving, and ToD arbitrage typically range from Rs. 80 lakhs to Rs. 1.2 crores depending on the facility’s load profile and applicable DISCOM tariff. At current BESS system costs, this translates to a payback period of 3–5 years on the BESS investment. EnerCog provides a pre-deployment savings model using your actual tariff schedule and load data before any hardware is specified.


EnerCog’s industrial energy management platform connects BESS monitoring and EMS, DG-solar synchronisation, zero export control, and Clarity UI reporting in a single platform. See the full solutions portfolio at EnerCog Solutions.

Get a Free Demo for Your Plant

See EnerCog model the electricity bill savings for your facility — using your actual DISCOM tariff schedule and load profile.

Get a free demo for your plant →