World Bank not to fund Thar coal project: spokesperson
To invest in environmentally sustainable projects
Saturday, May 29, 2010
By Saad Hasan
KARACHI: The World Bank will not finance coal-fired power plants in Pakistan, which faces a severe energy crisis in the wake of depleting gas fields and too much dependence on the expensive imported oil, officials said.
“Yes, the bank has decided that it will not proceed with the Thar coal technical assistance project,” the World Bank’s spokesperson in Islamabad informed The News in an email.
“The limited financing available can more effectively be directed towards investment that will address the energy shortfalls in the near-term in an environmentally sustainable manner,” the spokesperson said.
The World Bank decision is being seen as a blow to Pakistan, where demand for energy outstrips the supply. However, coal is seen as “dirty fuel” because of the high-level of pollution it creates when used as an energy source. Acquiring technology, which converts it into clean energy, remains costly and seen beyond the reach of cash-strapped Pakistan.
The World Bank spokesperson said that instead, it has been working on $650 million project for containing losses in the natural gas transmission system and increasing power production from Tarbela Dam.
One of the world’s largest coal reserves, estimated at more than 185 billion tons, were found in early 1990s in Tharparkar district of Sindh, but successive governments failed to exploit this huge energy resource.
Experts and power industry officials are unanimous on the importance of using indigenous coal to generate electricity. It is the most cost-effective solution to the energy crisis, they said.
World Bank not to fund Thar coal project: spokesperson
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Pakistani experts shocked
Saturday, May 29, 2010
The World Bank’s decision not to finance the Thar coal project came as a shock for Pakistani industry officials, who say that the country does not contribute any significant amounts to carbon emissions.
Khalid Mansoor, the CEO of Engro Energy, which has leased a block at Thar, says the World Bank’s decision reflects growing concerns over global warming. “But that is not a huge stumbling block for us. There are other options of financing as well.”
However, he said, the government needs to present its case properly to the World Bank, which has just recently allocated $3.7 billion for coal-fired power plants in South Africa.
“We are one of the least polluters. Our energy mix includes 33 per cent of power generation from dams and another 33 per cent from gas. There is a need for proper lobbying,” Mansoor said.
Farooq Hasan, the CEO of Hasan Associates, seconded the opinion. His company has fought in vain for years to get an appropriate tariff for the power plants, which might have used coal.
“Political will is missing. Successive governments have just paid lip service to the importance of indigenous coal reserves. Nothing will happen until there is a realisation at the highest level that using coal is in the larger national interest.”
During the last two years, the government had set up committees and even gone into public-private partnership for utilising coal reserves, but the process of getting regulatory approvals is too long and complicated. Engro Energy is the only firm, which is effectively pursing the coal prospects in Pakistan.
According to Najamul Hasan Farooqi, an energy consultant, Pakistan did not even mention coal as a source of future energy supply in its report, which is annually submitted to the World Bank.
“The country can’t count on its gas anymore. The supply-demand gap has already surged to 30 per cent,” he said. “The Iranian gas will be enough to generate between 2,500 and 3,000 megawatts and it is going to be expensive.”
He said the cost of energy has shot up substantially as thermal power plants use more furnace oil.
“Just the fuel cost of power generation is Rs10 per kilowatt hour when furnace oil is used. It is Rs3 per kWh for gas and using Iranian gas will take it to Rs8 per kWh. But the fuel cost of Lakhra coal is just Rs2.5 to Rs3 per kWh.” —SH
Pakistani experts shocked