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Gilani orders revamp of energy sector
By Summera Khan
Published: April 18, 2011
No new gas connections for six months, heads and boards of directors of all state-owned oil and gas companies removed.Published: April 18, 2011
ISLAMABAD:
Hours after President Asif Ali Zardari reappointed him adviser to the prime minister on petroleum, newly-elected Senator Asim Hussain was ordered by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani to embark on an ambitious plan to revamp the countrys energy sector.
In a meeting between Senator Hussain and the prime minister at the premiers official residence in Islamabad on Sunday evening, Gilani laid out a plan that was focused on managing the severe energy crisis in the country.
Among the problems facing the energy sector are an extreme shortage of natural gas and a massive inter-corporate circular debt problem that has debilitated the production capacity of power generation companies and refineries.
The most immediate consequence for ordinary consumers will be the six-month ban on new gas connections, which the prime minister said would not be granted under any circumstance.
But most of the plan seemed focused on reforming the way oil and gas companies operate in Pakistan, with a view to increasing domestic production capacity.
All of the managing directors of the state-owned oil and gas companies have been removed from their jobs with immediate effect. These include the heads of some of the largest companies in Pakistan, including the Oil & Gas Development Corporation, Pakistan Petroleum, Sui Northern Gas Pipelines, and Sui Southern Gas Company, among others.
The boards of directors of each of these companies will also be removed and reconstituted. In a bid to insulate the companies from political interference, the petroleum minister and petroleum secretary will not be represented on the board, despite the government being the single largest shareholder.
The government has often been criticised for forcing state-owned energy companies to pay dividends to fill its budget gaps rather than allowing them to reinvest their profits into expanding domestic energy production. The prime ministers moves appear to be geared towards addressing that criticism.
In addition, the prime minister also ordered the ministry to remove any regulatory impediments to the domestic exploration and distribution of oil and gas.
In a bid to improve the efficiency of the ministry itself, all petroleum ministry employees over the age of 60 or who are on contract were immediately removed from their positions.
Sui Northern Gas Pipelines and Sui Southern Gas Company, the countrys only two retail gas distribution companies, have been ordered to create a joint venture company that will import, market and distribute liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) into the country.
The petroleum ministry was also ordered to come up with a two-year plan to begin increasing domestic production of oil and gas.
The prime minister also ordered the ministry to vigorously pursue court cases against people accused of not paying their utility bills, one of the single biggest financial obstacles faced by energy companies in Pakistan.
All of these moves come as part of the prime ministers hydrocarbon vision for the next 20 years, which includes a plan to substantially increase the amount of energy the country derives from coal. The Thar Desert in Sindh has one of the largest reserves of coal in the world.
Senator Asim Hussain will resume his duties as the prime ministers adviser on petroleum, a cabinet level position, on Monday (today). He had been removed from the position earlier on allegations of corruption.
The senator was also asked by the prime minister to rationalise the prices of petroleum products in the near term, a euphemism for trying to find the balance between prices that are economically necessary (higher) and those that are politically feasible (lower).
The senator is a close personal friend of the president. Both of them attended Cadet College Petaro. Additional
reporting by Zia Khan
* all in all they are just statements, but i really like the idea of the government not getting involved in the gas and oil industry at all. Finally these things will become private industries. Maybe the gov. should also do this for the railways too.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 18th, 2011.