The Calcutta High Court has upheld a ₹780 crore arbitration award in favour of Reliance Infrastructure Ltd in a dispute with West Bengal-based Damodar Valley Corporation, the Anil Ambani group firm said in a stock exchange filing.
More than a decade back, Reliance Infrastructure had won a contract to set up a 1,200 MW thermal power plant in Purulia in West Bengal for ₹3,750 crore.
The project was delayed due to disputes and other reasons, leading to DVC seeking damages from Reliance Infrastructure. The latter, however, challenged this, and an arbitration tribunal in 2019 ruled in favour of the company and directed DVC to pay ₹896 crore to the company.
DVC challenged the order of the arbitral tribunal in the Calcutta High Court, which was dismissed by the court.
"This is to inform that on September 27, 2024, the Division Bench of Hon'ble High Court of Calcutta delivered its judgment in a petition filed by Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC) challenging the arbitration award under Section 34, dated September 29, 2023, amounting to approximately ₹780 crore, including accrued interest in favour of the company concerning the Raghunathpur Thermal Power Project," the firm said in the filing.
The company said the court "with the exception of relief on pre-award interest and reduction in the rate of interest on bank guarantee totalling to ₹181 crore and upheld the (arbitration) award, totalling approximately ₹780 crore, including accrued interest. In addition, the bank guarantee of ₹600 crore will also be released".
Reliance Infra said it is currently conducting a detailed review of the judgment and "will proceed, based on legal advice, either to enforce the Award to the extent upheld or to challenge the judgment dated September 27, 2024, where it interferes with the Award".