DISCOM stands for Distribution Company. In the Indian power sector, it refers to the entity responsible for distributing electricity to end consumers such as households, farms, commercial establishments, and industries. Ministry of Power material uses the term for both public and private distribution companies.
A DISCOM is the last-mile electricity utility in the power supply chain. Its main work is to purchase electricity from generators or through the grid and supply it to final consumers through the distribution network. This includes running substations, feeders, transformers, service connections, billing, metering, consumer service, and collection of revenue. Ministry of Power scheme documents repeatedly treat DISCOMs as the core operating entities of the distribution sector.
Place in the power sector
The electricity sector is usually understood in three segments:
• generation
• transmission
• distribution
DISCOMs belong to the distribution segment. They are the interface between the electricity system and the consumer. That is why their financial and operational health is critical for the entire power sector.
Main functions
The major functions of a DISCOM include:
• supplying electricity to end users
• maintaining local distribution infrastructure
• metering and billing consumers
• collecting tariffs and user charges
• reducing technical and commercial losses
• handling outages, service complaints, and consumer connections
• implementing reforms such as smart metering and feeder improvement
These functions are reflected in Ministry of Power reform schemes and energy accounting guidelines for DISCOMs.
Why DISCOMs are important
DISCOMs are important because even if generation capacity and transmission lines are strong, electricity cannot actually reach consumers efficiently unless the distribution system works well. Their performance affects:
• quality and reliability of supply
• consumer experience
• tariff sustainability
• power-sector finances
• success of reforms such as smart metering and renewable integration
Common problems faced by DISCOMs
In India, DISCOMs have often faced structural problems such as:
• high AT&C losses, meaning aggregate technical and commercial losses
• billing and collection inefficiencies
• delayed subsidy payments
• financial stress and accumulated losses
• weak infrastructure in some areas
• gaps in energy accounting and auditing
The Ministry of Power’s recent parliamentary replies and scheme documents continue to focus on these issues as central reform concerns.
Recent policy focus
A major current policy framework is the Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme, or RDSS, launched in 2021 to improve the operational efficiency and financial viability of distribution utilities. Ministry of Power material says the scheme aims to reduce AT&C losses and improve infrastructure through smart metering, system metering, and distribution works.
A Rajya Sabha reply dated 9 February 2026 stated that national-level AT&C losses of distribution utilities had come down from 21.91 percent in FY21 to 15.04 percent in FY25.
Public and private DISCOMs
The Ministry of Power explicitly uses the term DISCOMs for both public and private sector distribution companies. So the word is not limited only to state-owned utilities, even though state DISCOMs dominate much of India’s distribution sector.
Conclusion
A DISCOM is the electricity distribution company that delivers power to final consumers and manages the local distribution network. In India, DISCOMs are central to power-sector reform because the success of reliable electricity supply ultimately depends on how well the distribution system performs.
