By Team @ Mahendra Bhavsar & Co.
Reviewed by: Mahendra Bhavsar & Co. Legal Team
Last Updated: 14 June 2026
Quick Answer
In State of Himachal Pradesh & Ors. v. M/s Kundlas Loh Udyog, decided on 25 May 2026, the Supreme Court considered whether an existing industrial unit that had undertaken substantial expansion could claim the same concessional electricity tariff benefit available to new industries under the Himachal Pradesh Industrial Policy, 2019. The Court held that the policy always intended separate benefits for new industries and expanding industries. It also held that the later amendment to the policy was clarificatory and did not create a new entitlement.
Why This Judgment Matters
State industrial policies often offer incentives to attract investment, expand industrial activity and generate employment. Businesses frequently make investment decisions based on the benefits promised under such policies.
This judgment is important because it clarifies how incentive schemes should be interpreted when different categories of industries are involved. The Supreme Court examined whether a policy benefit intended for new industries could also be claimed by existing industries that had expanded their operations.
The ruling also discusses the doctrine of promissory estoppel in the context of government incentive schemes. While the Court acknowledged the importance of representations made by the State, it emphasised that entitlement depends on the true scope of the policy itself. The decision is therefore relevant for manufacturers, investors, industrial associations and legal professionals dealing with government incentive programmes.
Brief Facts
The State of Himachal Pradesh introduced its Industrial Policy, 2019 to encourage industrial investment and employment. The policy made various incentives available to eligible enterprises, including new industrial enterprises and existing enterprises undertaking substantial expansion. One of the incentives related to concessional electricity charges.
The respondent company was an existing manufacturing unit that had commenced production long before the policy came into force. In 2020, it undertook substantial expansion of its manufacturing facilities and obtained the necessary approvals and certificates from the authorities.
The company claimed that under Clause 16(a) of the Industrial Policy, it was entitled to electricity charges that were 15% lower than approved energy charges. The State disputed this interpretation and argued that the concession under Clause 16(a) was intended only for new industries, while existing industries undergoing substantial expansion were eligible only for a separate rebate linked to additional power consumption.
The High Court ruled in favour of the company. The State challenged that decision before the Supreme Court.
Key Legal Issue
The Supreme Court considered two principal questions:
1. Was the concessional electricity benefit under Clause 16(a) available to existing industries undertaking substantial expansion?
2. Could the respondent rely on the doctrine of promissory estoppel to claim the benefit?
What the Court Held
Separate Benefits for Separate Categories
The Supreme Court examined the structure of the Industrial Policy, 2019 and the related Rules. It noted that the policy consistently recognised two distinct categories of beneficiaries: new industrial enterprises and existing enterprises undertaking substantial expansion.
The Court observed that Clause 16(a) provided concessional electricity charges, while Clause 16(b) granted a rebate linked to additional power consumption. According to the Court, these incentives were designed for different categories of industries and served different policy objectives.
No Double Benefit Intended
The Court held that accepting the respondent’s interpretation would effectively allow expanding industries to receive both the concessional tariff benefit under Clause 16(a) and the rebate benefit under Clause 16(b). Such a result would create overlapping benefits and disrupt the policy’s structure. The Court found no indication that the State intended to confer this dual advantage.
Amendment Was Clarificatory
In 2022, the State amended the policy and replaced the expression “eligible enterprises” with “new enterprises” in Clause 16(a). The Supreme Court held that this amendment merely clarified what the policy had always intended. It did not create a new category of beneficiaries or take away any vested right.
Promissory Estoppel Did Not Assist the Respondent
The Court also examined the doctrine of promissory estoppel. However, having concluded that the concessional tariff benefit was never intended for the respondent’s category of enterprise, the Court found that the respondent could not rely upon the doctrine to obtain a benefit that was not originally available under the policy framework.
Practical Takeaways
- Businesses should carefully distinguish between incentives available to new units and those available to expanding units.
- Industrial policies may create separate benefit structures for different categories of enterprises.
- Clarificatory amendments may be treated as explaining the original intent of a policy.
- Eligibility for one incentive does not automatically confer entitlement to every benefit under a policy.
- Investment decisions should be based on the complete scheme of the policy rather than isolated clauses.
- Government incentive disputes often turn on the precise language and structure of the policy.
What the Judgment Does Not Decide
- Whether every industrial policy amendment is automatically clarificatory.
- Whether all future incentive withdrawals would be valid.
- The scope of incentives under other State industrial policies.
- Any entitlement beyond the specific electricity-related incentives considered in this case.
- Individual claims under different factual situations.
Short Ratio
Where an industrial policy creates distinct incentives for new industrial enterprises and existing enterprises undertaking substantial expansion, those benefits must be interpreted according to the policy’s overall structure. A clarificatory amendment explaining the original intent does not create or extinguish substantive rights.
FAQs:
1. What was the main issue before the Supreme Court?
The principal issue was whether an existing industrial enterprise that had undertaken substantial expansion could claim the concessional electricity tariff benefit available under Clause 16(a) of the Himachal Pradesh Industrial Policy, 2019.
2. Did the Supreme Court treat the respondent as an existing industrial enterprise?
Yes. The Court found that the respondent had commenced commercial production before the policy came into force and therefore qualified as an existing industrial enterprise that had undertaken substantial expansion.
3. Why did the Court reject the claim for concessional electricity charges?
The Court held that the policy intended different benefits for new industries and for existing industries undertaking substantial expansion. According to the Court, the respondent had already fallen within the category eligible for the separate rebate benefit.
4. What was the effect of the 2022 amendment?
The Court held that the amendment clarified the original policy intent by expressly referring to “new enterprises” in Clause 16(a). It was treated as clarificatory rather than creating a new right.
5. Did the Court discuss promissory estoppel?
Yes. The Court reviewed the doctrine in detail but ultimately held that the respondent could not use promissory estoppel to obtain a benefit that was not intended for its category under the policy framework.
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