I don’t understand what you mean by “high resolution images form openstreetmap”. OpenStreetMap is a database of points, lines, and their attributes. It contains no photographs, and the nearest to images are the bitmap approximations of the the contents of the database.
Certain aerial imagery has been licensed, by third parties, in particular Bing, for use as material to be traced to contribute to the database, but those images will not, normally include features that were only constructed last year.
If you want to use information on the transmission lines from the OpenStreetMap database, you will need to wait until someone, probably from Nanded Waghala, volunteers to survey and map them. Unfortunately, outside the rich Western countries, there seem to be few volunteers, even though GPS capable mobile phones are presumably widely used.
If you want to add them to the map, yourself, thankyou. However, you will need to do your own survey, e.g. by walking under the lines with a GPS receiver, or by visually associating the course of the lines with features that are old enough to appear on the imagery that has been licensed for use on OSM. I’m assuming that the Indian or Maharashtran governments haven’t published mapping with suitable licenses, as I think it unlikely that they have. Similarly I’m assuming that the power company hasn’t licensed such maps, which are not based on the government maps.(which I think is even less likely).
Whilst you are at it, it would be nice to have details of street names and public buildings added in Nanded Waghala. Although this is rather more work, it is quite easy, as all it really requires for the survey is some paper, a pen, and a pair of shoes, and you should have no difficulty gaining access.
You could, of course, add a map note. However, even in the UK, it can take over a year for a local mapper to act on these, and I suspect there just aren’t any local mappers in your area.