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Around 7,000MW added to power system in last five years

Devil Soul

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Around 7,000MW added to power system in last five years

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KARACHI: Pakistan’s electricity generation capacity surged to 29,573 megawatts till February from 22,812MW in 2012/13 as the government implemented strategies to cope up with the challenges of energy security, a ministry of energy’s document showed.

There has been a 30 percent growth in installed power generation capacity during the last five years due to diversification in energy mix.

Power generation increased 22 percent to 117,326 gigawatt hours (GWh) in 2016/17 as compared to 2012/13.

Analysts, however, estimated around 10,000 MW of addition in the installed generation capacity during the last five years.

The official document showed that a significant improvement has been seen in recovery of dues after decline in transmission and distribution losses. Average bill recovery remained above 90 percent in the last five years.

Pakistan Power Infrastructure Board and Alternative Energy Development Board facilitated the launch of as many as 39 power projects with an estimated investment of $9.9 billion between 2014 and 2018. Comparatively, the preceding government could attract alone $2.7 billion in power sector during 2009-2013, according to the document.

PML-N government decided to develop new wind and solar power projects, realising large potential of renewable resources. At least 18 wind power projects with 937.27MW of cumulative production capacity achieved commercial operation during the last five years, while another six solar power projects of 418MW were made operational during the period. Six sugar mills started generating 201.1MW from bagasse cogeneration.

The government had settled Rs480 billion of power sector’s circular debt when it came into power in 2013, which added 1,700MW in electricity to grid and considerably eased power outage in the country. The debt, however, reemerged and currently stands at Rs573 billion, undermining efforts made to improve power production and transmission, according to the ministry’s document.

The government unveiled Power Generation Policy 2015 to offer incentives to local as well as foreign investors, and simplified processing to encourage them to participate in the development of power projects.

The policy envisaged sufficient power generation capacity at lower cost and optimum exploitation of indigenous resources with mutual benefits for investors, government and public.

Share of hydropower in energy mix, however, fell during the last five years due mainly to low water availability. The government tried to offset this falling share through promotion of renewable energy sources, which, however, constitute only two percent of electricity generation.

The PML-N government set a policy effecting gradual shift to a decarburisation regime, focusing more on renewable energy sources in compliance with Paris climate agreement.

In 2015, PML-N government started import of liquefied natural gas (LNG) as it is an economical and efficient fuel as compared to other petroleum products. At present, the LNG re-gasification of two floating storage re-gasification units stands at 1,200 million metric cubic feet/day.

Government supplied 401mmcfd of RLNG to various power plants, including Bhikki, Haveli Bahadur Shah, Balloki, Halmore, Orient, Rousch, Kot Addu Power, Saif and Sapphire during July-Feb FY2018, while the remaining was supplied to fertiliser plants, industrial and transport sector.

Over the last five years, the government has removed energy side bottlenecks, due to which the economy was stuck in a low growth trap.

PML-N government started developing a five-year national electricity plan that would provide a roadmap for future power generation projects, pricing issues and set high standards for power consumers.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/324329-around-7-000mw-added-to-power-system-in-last-five-years
 
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The common man is not interested in MW but when the load shedding will end.
 
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The common man is not interested in MW but when the load shedding will end.

Never. and we deserve that. when people give preference to luxury (Metro Bus / Train / short term but expensive power solution(Coal, LNG, Furnace, Wind) / New Highway(Forget existing one)).
And to be honest something is more important then electricity its water. we are facing water shortage and in future situation will move from bad to critical.
Typically it took 6-8 year to construct a Dam.
you will kill 2 bird with one stone(Water & cheap electricity)
 
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renewable energy - solar/wind is the way to go given the vast expanse of desert and arid tracts of land.
 
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Which other political party is claiming to set new bench mark ?
 
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This is great news(not gonna think about the corruption/kickbacks bcuz that will be a depressing amount of money looted)...now the next government's focus should be to keep improving that by building more dams. Not only will that add more clean electricity, it will also add more water storage capacity.

Optionally Pak can make a deal with some Chinese companies(bcuz I don't think there's any domestic ones) to set up shop in Pak for manufacturing energy efficient household devices/machines(washing machine, drier, water heater, etc)/LED(or other energy efficient lights). The incentive being that the state would subsidize people who exchange/buy these energy efficient devices replacing their older inefficient ones. The subsidy shouldn't be too much and vary depending on various factors for each device(family income, inefficiency of the device currently in use, cost, etc). This way even if the subsidy is just a tiny percentage of the actual cost...plus the savings in electricity bill the consumer would stand to gain, together can be a great incentive for ppl to upgrade. On the other hand it would be a good incentive for the companies bcuz it will drive sales. With this subsidy along with the CPEC zones, which already have various tax incentives...it could entice them to set up shop in Pak...create jobs, export opportunities, etc.
 
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