Every energy decision in a business eventually lands on the same desk with the same question: what does it cost, and when does it pay back? A diesel generator answers badly, it costs you forever, every litre, every service, every year, with nothing to show at the end but an older machine. A battery energy storage system answers very differently. It has an upfront cost, yes, but from the day it switches on it starts handing money back to you across several separate channels at once.
That is the part most people miss. They look at a BESS as one big number and stop there. In reality, PuREPower 60.0 pays for itself the way a good investment compounds, through a stack of savings that work together. This article walks through that stack, line by line, in plain language and honest ranges. We will not quote you an exact rupee figure, because the truth is your payback depends on your tariffs, your solar size and how hard you run the system. What we will do is show you exactly where the money comes from, why a payback of roughly three to four years is realistic for a well-utilised unit, and why the savings keep flowing for many years after that.
Think of PuREPower 60.0 not as a cost but as six savings levers bundled into one indoor cabinet. No single lever pays for the system on its own. Stacked together, they do, and then some. Here is the whole story at a glance before we open each one up.
|
Savings Lever |
Where the Money Comes From |
Relative Impact |
|
Diesel eliminated |
No more fuel, oil, servicing or pollution clearances |
High, often the biggest single line |
|
Solar self-consumption |
Roof power used on-site instead of buying expensive grid units |
High, grows with your array |
|
Time-of-Day arbitrage |
Store cheap off-peak/solar energy, run on it at peak tariff |
Medium, rising as ToD spreads |
|
Demand-charge peak-shaving |
Battery covers spikes, lowering billed maximum demand |
Medium to high, depends on tariff |
|
Near-zero maintenance |
No fuel logistics, no engine overhauls, no battery watering |
Low to medium, but every year |
|
40 percent celerated depreciation |
Tax shield in the early years under the Income Tax Act |
One-time but significant up front |
Each row is a real, recurring saving. The magic is in the stack. Let us walk through them.
For most businesses still running a generator, this is the single largest lever, and the most satisfying to switch off. We covered the full diesel showdown in our diesel generator alternative article, so we will not repeat the engine detail here. The point for your payback calculation is simpler: every hour a generator runs, it burns money.
A genset in the popular commercial class burns a serious volume of diesel per hour under load, and with diesel hovering near or above ₹95–100 a litre, volatile, and trending up, that translates into lakhs of rupees a year for a business that runs a few hours of backup daily. The effective cost of diesel-backup energy works out to something in the region of ₹25–30 per unit, several times what it costs to charge a battery from solar or off-peak grid power. Switch the generator off and most of that spend evaporates overnight.
There is a second, quieter diesel saving too: you stop paying for the system around the fuel. No more periodic engine servicing, no oil and filter changes, no fuel storage and pilferage, and none of the tightening compliance burden, emission-norm upgrades, pollution-control consents and clean-air restrictions, that now surrounds running a diesel genset as primary power. Those costs do not appear on a fuel bill, but they are real, and they vanish with the generator.
The second lever turns your roof from a nice-to-have into a balance-sheet item. PuREPower 60.0 is a hybrid-solar system, so it does not just back up loads, it harvests and stores solar, and crucially keeps generating even during a power cut. Every unit of solar you consume on-site is a unit you do not buy from the grid at commercial tariff.
This matters more than it used to. Net metering for businesses is generally capped at small system sizes, which means you usually cannot simply spin your whole rooftop array backwards into the grid for full credit. The smart move has shifted from export everything to self-consume as much as possible, and storage is what makes that possible. With a battery in the mix, solar generated at noon does not have to be used at noon; it can be banked and spent in the evening when both your load and the grid tariff are highest. If you want the detail on how billing works, our net-metering and solar and on-grid solar explainers go deeper. For payback, the headline is this: solar self-consumption steadily eats into your grid bill, and that bite grows every year as tariffs climb.
Here is where a battery starts to feel less like backup and more like a tiny power-trading desk on your premises. Under India's Electricity (Rights of Consumers) Amendment Rules of 2023, Time-of-Day tariffs have become mandatory for commercial and industrial consumers above 10 kW, rolling out across states. In plain terms: electricity now costs different amounts at different times of day. Solar hours are cheaper; peak evening hours are dearer, often by a meaningful margin in either direction.
A passive business just pays whatever the clock says. A business with PuREPower 60.0 plays the clock. The built-in Time-of-Day and Time-of-Use scheduling lets the system charge itself when energy is cheap, from your own solar, or from low-cost off-peak grid power, and then discharge to run your loads during the expensive peak window. You are quite literally buying energy low and using it high, every single day, automatically. The wider the gap between off-peak and peak rates grows, the more this lever earns. And because ToD is now a policy rather than an option for larger commercial users, this is a saving that is set to become more valuable over time, not less.
This is the lever most businesses have never even heard of, and it is often one of the largest. Commercial and industrial electricity bills are not just about how many units you consume, they also include a demand charge (sometimes called maximum-demand or sanctioned-demand charge) billed on the highest power level, in kW, that you draw in a billing cycle. Hit a high spike for even a few minutes, every motor and compressor starting together on a Monday morning, and you can be billed on that peak for the whole month.
PuREPower 60.0 flattens those spikes. When your demand surges, the battery quietly contributes power alongside the grid, so the grid never sees the full spike, a technique called peak-shaving. By capping the peaks of the utility meters, the system can trim your maximum-demand charges meaningfully, commonly in the region of 20–40 percent pending on your load profile and tariff structure. Because demand charges recur every billing cycle regardless of how reliable the grid is, this saving keeps working even in cities where outages are rare, which is exactly why it is so valuable to urban offices, retail and light manufacturing.
Not every saving is dramatic, but the quiet ones add up year after year. A diesel generator is a high-maintenance machine, servicing on a tight schedule, oil and filters, fuel handling, eventual overhauls. An inverter with a lead-acid bank is no holiday either: water top-ups, a ventilated battery room, and replacement of the whole bank every few years. We cover that lead-acid story in full in our commercial energy storage and power backup guide, so here we will simply note the contrast.
PuREPower 60.0 is engineered for near-zero maintenance. Its advanced NMC lithium-ion battery needs no watering and no ventilated room. Its Nano PCM thermal management is passive and fireproof, with no liquid-cooling pumps to service. The 5th-generation smart BMS and predictive cloud AI watch the system continuously and flag issues before they become failures, and firmware improves itself over the air. For the owner, that means fewer service visits, fewer consumables, and far less of the unbudgeted "the generator's down again" spending that never shows up in the original quote. Over a ten-year horizon, low maintenance is not a rounding error, it is a steady tailwind on your return.
The final lever is a gift from the tax code, and for a profit-making business it can be the difference between a good payback and a great one. Under the Income Tax Act, qualifying assets of this kind attract accelerated depreciation of 40%, letting a business write down a large share of the asset's value quickly in the early years. That depreciation is a deductible expense, which means a lower taxable profit and a real reduction in tax outgo in those first years of ownership.
In cash-flow terms, accelerated depreciation effectively pulls part of your return forward. The system is busy saving you money on diesel, solar and tariffs from day one; meanwhile the depreciation benefit is quietly reducing your tax bill in parallel. For many commercial buyers, this front-loaded tax shield is what compresses the payback period from "sometime in the future" into the realistic three-to-four-year range. Exact treatment depends on your accounts and your tax position, so this is one to confirm with your chartered accountant, but the lever is real, it is established, and it is one of the strongest reasons businesses move sooner rather than later.
So what does the stack add up to? No single lever pays for PuREPower 60.0. But layer them, diesel spend largely gone, grid bills trimmed by solar self-consumption, peak-tariff hours covered by cheap stored energy, demand charges shaved by a fifth to two-fifths, maintenance costs minimised, and a meaningful chunk of value written off against tax in the early years, and the picture changes completely.
For a well-utilised unit in a business with the right ingredients (real diesel runtime to displace, a decent solar array, ToD tariffs and healthy demand charges), a payback in roughly three to four years is a realistic expectation. Some sites land faster; sites with little diesel to replace or low utilisation will take longer. The honest answer is that it depends, which is why we deal in ranges, not a single number, and why a proper site assessment matters.
What is not in doubt is what happens after payback. A diesel generator at year four is simply four years older and four years more expensive to keep running. PuREPower 60.0 at year four has paid for itself and is still going, silently saving on every bill, backed by a warranty that runs 5 years as standard and up to 12 years extended. The years after payback are not break-even; they are pure return on an asset built to last a decade and more.
It is worth stepping back, because the savings stack is not happening in a vacuum, policy is steadily pushing in the same direction. Time-of-Day tariffs becoming mandatory for larger commercial and industrial users is a deliberate signal: the grid wants you to shift load away from peak hours, and storage is the cleanest way to do it. Accelerated depreciation is a deliberate incentive to invest in exactly this kind of asset. And the broader policy currently is increasingly favouring solar-plus-storage rather than solar alone.
Maharashtra is a clear example: under its renewable-energy and storage policy, from 1 April 2026 grid-interactive renewable projects above a certain size will be required to add storage, and the threshold for open access to cheaper renewable power is being lowered in a way that opens the door for many more mid-sized businesses. We would frame this carefully, the binding requirements centre on larger projects, and the picture for the smallest enterprises is supportive and enabling rather than a blanket mandate, but the direction of travel is unmistakable. Across India, the framework is moving toward storage as a normal part of a commercial energy setup, not an exotic add-on. Buying a hybrid solar-plus-storage system like the 60.0 today is, in effect, getting ahead of where policy is already heading. For more on the hybrid approach, see our hybrid solar system overview.
PuREPower 60.0 does not pay for itself through one clever trick. It pays for itself the way disciplined investments do, by stacking several real, recurring savings on top of one another until they overtake the cost. Diesel gone. Solar kept. Peak tariffs side-stepped. Demand charges shaved. Maintenance minimised. Tax reduced. Together, those levers commonly deliver a payback in roughly three to four years, after which the system keeps saving quietly for years more.
That is the difference between a cost and an asset. A generator takes money out of your business for as long as you own it. PuREPower 60.0 starts giving it back from day one, and the longer you own it, the better the math gets.
Want to see the numbers for your site? Talk to a PuREPower advisor or your nearest authorised dealer for a quick load assessment and a savings estimate built around your actual tariffs, solar potential and usage.
Q: How long does PuREPower 60.0 take to pay for itself?
For a well-utilised unit in a business with the right ingredients, real diesel runtime to displace, a decent solar array, Time-of-Day tariffs and healthy demand charges, a payback of roughly three to four years is a realistic expectation. Sites with heavy diesel use and strong solar can land faster; those with low utilisation or little diesel to replace will take longer. Because the return depends on your specific tariffs, solar size and usage pattern, the honest answer is a range rather than a single figure. A proper site assessment gives you a tailored estimate, and after payback the system keeps saving for years.
Q: What are the main ways a commercial BESS saves money?
Six levers stack together. First, diesel fuel and servicing are largely eliminated. Second, solar self-consumption replaces expensive grid units. Third, Time-of-Day arbitrage lets you store cheap energy and run on it at peak tariff. Fourth, peak-shaving trims demand charges. Fifth, near-zero maintenance removes recurring service costs. Sixth, 40 percent celerated depreciation provides a tax shield in the early years. No single lever pays for the system alone, but stacked together they typically deliver payback in roughly three to four years, then continue saving well beyond that.
Q: What is Time-of-Day arbitrage and how does it save money?
Time-of-Day tariffs mean electricity costs different amounts at different hours, cheaper during solar hours, dearer during peak evening hours. PuREPower 60.0 uses built-in Time-of-Day scheduling to charge itself when energy is cheap (from your solar or off-peak grid power) and then discharge to run your loads during the expensive peak window. In effect you buy energy low and use it high, automatically, every day. Under the 2023 Electricity Rules, Time-of-Day tariffs are now mandatory for commercial and industrial consumers above 10 kW, so this saving is set to grow more valuable as the gap between peak and off-peak rates widens.
Q: What are demand charges, and how does peak-shaving reduce them?
Commercial and industrial bills include a demand charge billed on the highest power level (in kW) you draw in a billing cycle, not just total units consumed. A brief spike, such as many motors starting together, can set a high charge for the whole month. PuREPower 60.0 reduces this through peak-shaving: when demand surges, the battery contributes power alongside the grid so the utility never meters the full spike. This can trim maximum-demand charges meaningfully, commonly in the region of 20–40 percent pending on your load profile and tariff. Because demand charges recur regardless of grid reliability, this saving works even where outages are rare.
Q: What is the 40 percent celerated depreciation benefit?
Under the Income Tax Act, qualifying assets of this kind attract accelerated depreciation of 40%, letting a business write down a large share of the asset's value quickly in the early years. Because depreciation is a deductible expense, it lowers taxable profit and reduces tax outgo in those first years, effectively pulling part of your return forward. For many profit-making businesses this front-loaded tax shield is what compresses payback into the three-to-four-year range. The exact treatment depends on your accounts and tax position, so confirm the specifics with your chartered accountant, but the benefit is well established under Indian tax law.
Q: How much can I save by eliminating my diesel generator?
For businesses running a generator regularly, this is often the single biggest saving. A commercial-class genset under load burns a serious volume of diesel per hour, and with diesel near or above ₹95–100 a litre, that adds up to lakhs of rupees a year for a few hours of daily backup, an effective energy cost in the region of ₹25–30 per unit. Beyond fuel, you also stop paying for servicing, oil, fuel handling and the growing compliance burden of running diesel as primary power. Switching the generator off makes most of that recurring spend disappear, which is why diesel displacement so often anchors the payback.
Q: Do I need solar to make a commercial BESS worthwhile?
Solar strengthens the return but is not the only lever. Even without a large array, PuREPower 60.0 still earns through Time-of-Day arbitrage (storing cheap off-peak grid power for peak-hour use), demand-charge peak-shaving, eliminated diesel costs and accelerated depreciation. That said, because it is a hybrid-solar system that keeps generating during outages, pairing it with a good rooftop array adds a powerful, growing savings stream as grid tariffs rise. The strongest paybacks usually combine all the levers, diesel displacement, solar self-consumption, tariff arbitrage and peak-shaving, but the system creates value even where one or two of those are modest.
Q: Why do you give ranges instead of an exact payback figure?
Because an honest answer demands it. Payback depends on variables that differ for every site: your current diesel runtime, your electricity tariffs and whether they include Time-of-Day and demand charges, the size of your solar array, how hard you run the system, and your tax position. Quoting a single precise number for every business would be misleading. Instead we give realistic ranges, roughly three to four years for a well-utilised unit, and recommend a proper site assessment to produce a figure tailored to your actual usage. The ranges are directional and conservative; your advisor can sharpen them into a specific estimate.
Q: What happens after the system has paid for itself?
This is the best part. Once PuREPower 60.0 has paid back, typically in roughly three to four years, the savings do not stop; they become pure return. Every bill it trims, every litre of diesel it avoids and every peak it shaves from then on is money kept in your business rather than spent recovering the original cost. Because the system is built to last a decade and more, backed by a warranty of 5 years standard and up to 12 years extended, you are looking at many post-payback years of continued saving. A diesel generator only gets more expensive with age; a well-utilised BESS keeps paying you back.
Q: Is policy pushing businesses toward solar-plus-storage?
Yes, increasingly. Time-of-Day tariffs becoming mandatory for commercial and industrial users above 10 kW is a clear signal to shift load off peak hours, and storage is the cleanest way to do that. Accelerated depreciation incentivises exactly this kind of investment. And state policy is moving the same way, for example, Maharashtra's renewable and storage policy will, from April 2026, require larger grid-interactive renewable projects to add storage while widening access to cheaper renewable power. The binding rules centre on bigger projects, so we would not over-claim a blanket mandate, but the direction is unmistakable: storage is becoming a normal part of a commercial energy setup, and the 60.0 gets you ahead of the curve.