Arjun was the star electrical engineer at a busy steel manufacturing plant in Raipur. He knows exactly how to fix massive generators, transformers, panels, etc., but he has a headache. Why?.
His manager had just handed him a new project—twenty kilometers from the plant.He is now look overall electricity arrangement for the site, Construction hadn’t even begun, yet power was needed yesterday. The instruction was simple to say and hard to do: arrange a 5 MVA DG set on an urgent basis and look after the entire electrical arrangement for the site.
“Okay, DG set—simple enough,” he thought. Then reality surged. Instead of engineering and procurement, Arjun found himself wading into rules, regulations, and approvals. His browser became a battlefield: CEIG sites, government portals, and endless PDFs.
“What’s the exact process?” • “Is renting a DG set even allowed?” • “Which is the latest version of the application form?” • “Who do I call at the authority’s office?”
The deeper he searched, the more tangled the wires became. Central vs. state rules. CEIG vs. the transmission/distribution company. Roles of the energy department. Different processes for different authorities. And, in the noise, the bigger picture began to fade—future power line connectivity, the latest regulations, and the risk of costly mistakes.
His desk turned into a paper storm. The pressure mounted. One tiny misstep could set off delays, penalties, and a heavy financial burden for his company.
Then, something changed. Arjun opened PowerI. The chaos quieted. On his screen, a clear, interactive map unfolded—step by step, in the right order, with the right documents and the right people.
What PowerI showed Arjun
Plain-language steps, in sequence.
Always‑current templates and submission points.
CEIG and utility points of contact—no guesswork.
For today’s setup and tomorrow’s expansion.
No more frantic searches. No more second‑guessing. Just clarity. Arjun leaned back; for the first time in days, he felt in control. With PowerI, he wasn’t only solving today—he was planning for tomorrow.