Solar Monitoring Company in Madhya Pradesh — PM-KUSUM Component B, DG-Solar Hybrid and Rural Feeder Monitoring
India’s largest PM-KUSUM Component B state. Rural DG-solar hybrids across Bundelkhand and Chambal. Low-connectivity environments where cloud-dependent platforms go blind. EnerCog operates at the edge — monitoring continuity regardless of network availability.
Madhya Pradesh has approximately 3.5 GW of installed solar capacity and holds a distinction no other Indian state can claim: it is the country’s largest PM-KUSUM Component B state by number of solar pump installations. Tens of thousands of standalone solar pumps have been deployed across MP’s agricultural districts, and the MNRE portal compliance obligation that comes with each installation is the single largest monitoring gap in the state’s solar sector. EnerCog is the AI-powered solar monitoring platform built for MP’s specific combination of PM-KUSUM scale, rural infrastructure constraints, and MNRE compliance obligations.
Solar Operators in Madhya Pradesh Face These Challenges
PM-KUSUM Component B: India’s Largest State Programme, Biggest Compliance Gap
Madhya Pradesh leads India in PM-KUSUM Component B — tens of thousands of solar pumps commissioned across agricultural districts, most without a monitoring system.
- MPEZ and the state nodal agency require pump operating data submitted to the MNRE MIS portal in structured format
- Vidisha, Sagar, Damoh, Chhindwara, and Hoshangabad districts have the highest concentration of installations
- Vast majority of Component B beneficiaries submit data manually — irregularly, frequently non-compliant
- MNRE is linking subsidy continuity to compliance records — audit risk is growing rapidly
The gap between scheme requirement and on-ground monitoring capability is the largest in India’s PM-KUSUM programme.
Rural Feeder DG-Solar Hybrid: Monitoring Without Connectivity
MP’s rural distribution network — Bundelkhand, Chambal valley, tribal districts — suffers from voltage fluctuations, extended outages, and patchy connectivity.
- Solar installations frequently paired with diesel generators in DG-PV hybrid configurations
- Cloud-dependent monitoring platforms lose visibility entirely during grid outages or connectivity drops
- Data gaps occur precisely when the hybrid system is under maximum operational stress
- Outage periods are when monitoring is most valuable — and most absent
A monitoring platform that fails during outages is not a monitoring platform for rural MP.
SLDC Scheduling and MPERC Compliance for Grid-Connected Projects
For grid-connected solar plants under MPERC-approved PPAs, SLDC Madhya Pradesh requires day-ahead and intra-day schedule submissions with DSM consequences.
- CERC DSM framework applies — 15-minute block deviations beyond the tolerance band erode PPA revenue
- Rewa, Neemuch, and Morena plants face transmission constraints during high-injection periods
- Curtailment during constrained periods requires timestamped evidence to claim deviation exemptions
- MPERC regulations require compliance-grade data archives for audit
Plant operators in MP’s utility belt need both accurate SLDC forecasting and curtailment event logging to protect revenue.
How EnerCog Solves It for Madhya Pradesh Solar Plants
PM-KUSUM Component B Monitoring with MNRE Portal Integration
EnerCog connects to solar pump inverters via RS485 Modbus and automates the full MNRE MIS portal data pipeline.
- Logs pump operating hours, energy generated, irradiance proxy metrics, and start/stop sequences at 1-second resolution
- Exports directly in MNRE MIS portal format — no manual data extraction required
- Centralised dashboard showing compliance status, submission history, and alerts for any non-reporting site
- Deployable at three levels: individual beneficiary, EPC aggregator (50–500 pumps), or state nodal agency
Learn more about EnerCog’s PM-KUSUM monitoring and compliance solution.
Edge Intelligence for Rural Low-Connectivity Environments
EnerCog’s edge controller operates fully autonomously — logging all data locally when connectivity is unavailable and syncing to the cloud when it restores.
- GPRS (2G) fallback covers the majority of rural districts in Bundelkhand, Chambal, and the tribal belt
- No data gaps caused by connectivity failures — the submission record is always complete
- Onboard local storage ensures continuity through extended outages
- No cloud dependency at the edge means no monitoring blind spots during the events that matter most
Edge-autonomous operation is not a feature for MP — it is a baseline requirement.
DG-Solar Hybrid Monitoring and Synchronisation Tracking
EnerCog monitors DG-solar hybrid configurations natively — tracking solar, diesel generator, and battery simultaneously from a single controller.
- Solar inverter output, DG run-hours, battery state of charge, and grid availability tracked simultaneously
- Synchronisation events between solar, DG, and grid logged with precise timestamps
- Full visibility into fuel consumption, solar offset performance, and battery utilisation
- Essential for PM-KUSUM Component B compliance documentation and day-to-day O&M management
See how EnerCog handles DG and gas-solar synchronisation monitoring for hybrid plant configurations.
PM-KUSUM in Madhya Pradesh: What the Scale Means
EnerCog’s Component B monitoring solution can be deployed at three levels: individual beneficiary installations (single pump, direct RS485 connection), aggregator-level deployments (EPC contractors managing 50–500 pump installations in a district), and state-level monitoring portals (for nodal agencies requiring consolidated compliance dashboards across all scheme beneficiaries). The platform’s GPRS fallback capability and edge autonomy make it viable across all MP districts, including those where connectivity infrastructure is minimal.
Why Madhya Pradesh Solar Operators Choose EnerCog
Automated PM-KUSUM Component B MNRE portal export
covers pump operating hours, energy generated, and availability data in the required format for MP’s nodal agency submissions. Eliminates manual data compilation for individual beneficiaries and EPC portfolios.
GPRS fallback and edge-autonomous operation
full data logging continuity in rural Bundelkhand, Chambal, and tribal districts where 4G coverage is absent and grid outages are frequent. No monitoring blind spots during outage periods.
DG-PV hybrid monitoring
simultaneous tracking of solar inverter, diesel generator, and battery with synchronisation event logging. Gives rural hybrid plant operators the operational data to manage fuel costs and demonstrate solar offset to scheme auditors.
