Tag: load shedding

  • Gas shortage worsens in Pakistan amid rising demand and low reserves

    Gas shortage worsens in Pakistan amid rising demand and low reserves

    Minister of State for Petroleum, Musadik Malik, stated on Wednesday that the general public cannot receive gas 24/7 due to a decline in the commodity’s reserves, which is a significant reason. Pakistan relies heavily on natural gas for energy, and with increasing demand and insufficient supply, load shedding has become a daily occurrence in many areas of the country. This situation worsens during Ramadan when Pakistanis consume more gas for cooking and other purposes, particularly during sehri and iftar timings.

    During a conversation with journalists in Karachi, the minister mentioned that gas load shedding would end during sehar and iftar but did not specify when. “We cannot provide gas for 24 hours as our reserves have decreased,” he stated. Recently, the issue of gas scarcity in Karachi has caught the attention of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who has directed relevant officials to ensure an uninterrupted supply of the commodity. He has instructed that the supply of gas must be monitored, and no negligence should be tolerated.

    Due to the widening gap between gas supply and demand, the Sui Southern Gas Company (SSGC) has announced its decision to suspend supplies to captive power plants and industries. The gas utility has stated that this decision has been made due to low gas supply, and the volume of gas in pipelines has decreased. In response, the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) has called for immediate government action to address the shortage of gas supply to Karachi’s industries, stating that the industries cannot operate without gas and would be forced to halt production.

    KCCI President Muhammad Tariq Yousuf said, “It is highly unfair to have such an attitude towards Karachi’s business community, which, despite facing so many challenges, contributes around 54 per cent in terms of exports and more than 68 per cent in terms of revenue.”

    While talking to journalists, Malik said that his visit to Karachi was aimed at resolving the gas supply issues faced by the people and urged them to pay their utility bills. “The gas bill of the rich and poor has been separated; rich people will have to pay more now,” he said, adding that the separation of gas bills for the rich and the poor was now in effect.

  • PM Shehbaz regrets ‘inconvenience’ to Pakistanis from major power outage

    Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif has addressed Monday’s major power breakdown that left most of the country without electricity for more than 12 hours.

    In a tweet, the Premier expressed his “sincere regrets”. He wrote, “On behalf of my government, I would like to express my sincere regrets for the inconvenience our citizens suffered due to the power outage yesterday.”

    He added that an inquiry is going on to determine what led to the sudden blackout.

    A day after the power outage, Minister for Energy Khurram Dastgir said that electricity has been fully restored at grid stations across the country. However, the minister pointed out that there will be a shortage of electricity for the next two days.

    Residents complained of increased load-shedding even after the restoration, laying doubt on the government’s claims that power was fully restored.

    In a televised address on Tuesday, the minister explained said that there was a “delay in synchronisation” between Tarbela and Mangla power plants.

  • Iesco issues two-hour load-shedding plan for Rawalpindi, Islamabad

    Iesco issues two-hour load-shedding plan for Rawalpindi, Islamabad

    All areas of Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Jhelum, Chakwal, Azad Kashmir, Murree, Attock, Pindigheb, Kotli Sattiyan, and other circles will face two hours of load-shedding, according to the Islamabad Electric Supply Company (Iesco).

    According to The News, the citizens of these cities have been experiencing regular load-shedding for more than a month that lasts between six and eight hours. Muhammad Tanvir Kiani, who is head of Iesco’s technical division, stated that Iesco has announced a two-hour load-shedding timetable in each of the aforementioned locations.

    He said that the load-shedding schedule would initially last indefinitely until further instruction. Furthermore, he stated that due to an electricity shortage, load-shedding has been implemented in all areas in light of the current situation.

  • Nepra approves price increase of Rs9.66 per unit for Karachi

    Nepra approves price increase of Rs9.66 per unit for Karachi

    On account of the fuel cost adjustment (FCA) for May 2022, the National Electric Electricity Regulatory Authority (Nepra) allowed K-Electric to increase its power rate by Rs9.66 per unit on Monday.

    According to Aaj News, Nepra will make the announcement following careful consideration.

    In order to transfer the financial burden of Rs22.65 billion to consumers for May 2022, K-Electric requested an increase of Rs11.34 per unit.

    Officials from Nepra questioned K-Electric during a hearing about why it wasn’t buying less expensive electricity and offered to help K-Electric establish a connection with the provincial and federal governments for this reason.

    The power distributor also questioned K-Electric’s decision not to use the inexpensive oil it had acquired for power production.

    Nepra’s representatives responded that the company was using peak hours, which are from 6:30 PM to 10:30 PM, to provide electricity and that the cost of power is much greater at these times.

    The FCA estimate for May 2022, according to K-Electric, was based on the requested rate for the month from CPPA-G and is subject to change based on a decision to be made by Nepra.

    In its FCA adjustment request, the power utility informed the regulator that it imports from outside sources and dispatches power from its own generating units (with the available fuel resources) in accordance with economic merit orders (EMOs).

  • Pakistani mobile manufacturing businesses are laying off workers due to economic challenges

    Pakistani mobile manufacturing businesses are laying off workers due to economic challenges

    There has been significant upheaval in the economy as a result of the new tax structure, rising inflation, and the power shortage.

    The Samsung mobile factory, which is owned by Lucky Motors, experienced a similar situation when it had to lay off a number of employees because Pakistan was short on raw materials.

    In addition to Samsung, there have also been reports of firing close to 1,000 workers at the Vivo mobile factory.

    Lucky Motor Corporation was permitted by PTA to manufacture Samsung mobile devices in August 2021, which sounded like a great news in terms of job creation and GDP contribution, among other things.

    In various economic sectors, each economic measure can have numerous impacts. As per economic theory, a nation’s high rate of inflation discourages investment since it makes it less certain that those investments will be lucrative. Humongous unemployment is being caused by this, along with an import ban and a recently implemented “super tax” in Pakistan.

    Additionally, businesses like Careem and Airlift recently stopped operating in some sectors and let go of a number of employees.

    In the year 2020, Careem fired 31 per cent of its workforce due to a pandemic. A number of the staff members at SVWL, Airlift, and Careem Food were let go in 2022. limited their operations or nearly shut down.

  • Video: Karachiites protest against load-shedding, clashes erupt between police protesters

    Video: Karachiites protest against load-shedding, clashes erupt between police protesters

    Residents of Karachi came out on the streets in the late hours of Monday to protest against the unannounced and prolonged load-shedding in their areas.

    On Tuesday morning, the police used tear gas and baton-charged protestors in an effort to disperse the crowd, which resulted in a clash between the two.

    According to Dawn, the demonstrators have been protesting since last night, burnt tyres, and blocked the road for traffic, which has caused traffic problems.

    The chairman of the All Pakistan Fruit and Vegetable Exporters, Importers and Merchants Association (PFVA) Aslam Pakhali said that over 100 shipping containers carrying mangoes and potatoes are worth an estimated Rs250 million were stuck in traffic since Monday evening.

    https://twitter.com/nshz22/status/1541682874750947328?s=20&t=OIuOxKPZe5onCToMDfxlBw

    According to Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Asif Bughio, electricity in several areas of Lyari has been suspended since 4pm yesterday (Monday). He claimed that the police tried to negotiate with them but they attacked the law enforcers with stones.

    Their protest has continued for more than 20 hours now.

    According to media reports, in Karachi’s Gadap Town, the load-shedding time has gone up to 18 hours in a day. Similarly, Shah Faisal Colony, Malir, Surjani Town, Gulistan-e-Jauhar, and other areas are seeing power outages of 14 hours or more.

    Following the incidents, Sindh Energy Minister Imtiaz Ahmad Shaikh contacted K-Electric Chief Executive Moonis Alvi. He noted that load-shedding has made the lives of people miserable.

    “Due to persistent load-shedding, the security situation is deteriorating,” he told the KE official.

    A day earlier, Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif warned the nation that they might face increased load-shedding in the coming month of July.

  • Pakistan pushed into darkness due to Europe’s decision to cut off Russian fuel

    Pakistan pushed into darkness due to Europe’s decision to cut off Russian fuel

    The European attempt to abandon Russian oil is intended to punish Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine. It’s also wreaking havoc thousands of miles away, throwing Pakistan into darkness, destabilising one regime, and jeopardising the country’s new leadership’s stability.

    According to Bloomberg, Pakistan invested heavily in liquefied natural gas and inked long-term contracts with Italian and Qatari suppliers. Some of those suppliers have now defaulted, although continuing to sell into the more lucrative European market, putting Pakistan in the very situation it hoped to avoid.

    The country took particular precautions a decade ago to protect itself from the sorts of price increases that are currently shaking the market.

    Last month, the government spent about $100 million on a single LNG shipment from the spot market to avert outages during the Eid holiday, a record for the cash-strapped country.

    The country’s LNG costs could reach $5 billion in the fiscal year ending in July, more than double what they were a year ago. Even still, the government is powerless to protect its citizens: the IMF is in talks to bail out the country on the condition that it reduces fuel and energy subsidies.

    Outages lasting more than 12 hours

    Parts of Pakistan are currently suffering scheduled blackouts lasting more than 12 hours, reducing the ability of air conditioning to provide respite during the current heat wave. The former prime minister continues to gather enormous audiences to demonstrations and marches, exacerbating voters’ discontent with 13.8 per cent inflation. The hosts of prime-time talk shows frequently discuss how Pakistan will obtain the petroleum it requires and how much it would have to spend.

    The administration introduced a fresh set of energy-saving measures last week. Civil servants were relieved of their normal Saturday shifts, and the security budget was slashed by half.

    Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif remarked in an April tweet before of the Eid holiday, “I am acutely aware of the sufferings people are facing”. That same week, he ordered his government to resume purchasing costly overseas natural gas shipments.

    He also warned earlier this month that they don’t have the money to keep importing gas from other countries.

    Rerouted supply to power plants

    There will be more than just outages as a result of the supply shortage. The government has rerouted existing natural gas supply to power plants, causing fertiliser manufacturers to be shortchanged. This approach could jeopardise the next harvest, resulting in even higher food prices the following year. Backup generators are being used by cellphone towers to keep service going during the blackouts, but they, too, are running out of fuel.

    There’s not much hope in the future. LNG prices have risen by over 1,000 per cent in the previous two years, first due to post-pandemic demand and subsequently due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Russia is Europe’s largest natural gas supplier, and the possibility of supply disruptions pushed spot rates to an all-time high in March.

    Increasing LNG demand in Europe

    Meanwhile, Europe is increasing its need for LNG. Europe’s LNG imports have increased by 50 per cent so far this year compared to the same period last year, and show no signs of slowing down. As they cut ties with President Vladimir Putin’s regime over the crisis in Ukraine, European Union policymakers created a plan to considerably increase LNG deliveries as an alternative to Russian gas.

    Floating import terminals are being built at a breakneck pace in countries like Germany and the Netherlands, with the first ones set to open in the next six months.

    “Europe is draining LNG from the rest of the globe,” according to Steve Hill, executive vice president of Shell Plc, the world’s largest LNG trader. “However, this means that less LNG will be sent to developing markets”.

    Pakistan was formerly thought to be the LNG industry’s bright future. Demand for the fuel had peaked in developed markets by the mid-2010s. However, technological developments had reduced the costs and time it took to build import terminals, and new gas sources had reduced the cost of the fuel itself.

    Poor nations could finally contemplate the gasoline at the new, lower prices. Suppliers flocked to these new markets, and when Pakistan published a request for long-term LNG supply, over a dozen businesses competed for the contract.

    Pakistan chose Italy’s Gunvor Group Ltd to sell LNG to the country for the next decade in 2017. The terms were favourable at the time, and the prices were lower than those of a comparable arrangement struck with Qatar the previous year.

    Delay in supplies

    However, due to the rise in European gas prices, the two suppliers have postponed more than a dozen shipments slated for delivery between October 2021 and June 2022.

    According to Bruce Robertson, an expert at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, such defaults are nearly unheard of in the LNG market. Bloomberg spoke with traders and industry insiders who couldn’t recall the last time so many cargoes were rejected without being linked to a big outage at an export terminal.

    Eni and Gunvor stated they had to cancel because they were experiencing their own supply problems and didn’t have enough LNG to export to Pakistan. When exporters confront such difficulties, they typically replace deliveries by purchasing a consignment on the spot market, but Eni and Gunvor have not done so.

    Vendors are generally averse to cancelling orders. It harms the company connection and is often extremely costly. In established markets, fines for “failure to deliver” might be as high as 100 per cent.

    “It’s quite rare for LNG suppliers to renege on long-term contracts beyond force majeure occurrences,” says Valery Chow, an analyst at Wood Mackenzie Ltd.

    Pakistan’s contracts stipulated a lower cancellation penalty of 30 per cent, most probably in exchange for cheaper overall costs. The European spot market prices are currently high enough to more than compensate for the penalties.

    Pakistan’s $12 million LNG supply contract

    As per sources, an LNG supply to Pakistan for delivery in May under a long-term contract would cost $12 per million British thermal units. In comparison, spot cargoes to Europe for May delivery were trading for more than $30. Eni and Gunvor have kept their promises to customers in the region.

    As a result, Pakistan is back to square one, in a weaker negotiation position than before. After a dispute with Pakistan’s army over a variety of problems, including his management of energy supply and the greater economy, Prime Minister Imran Khan was deposed in April.

    Shehbaz Sharif, the new prime minister, has directed the state-owned importer to obtain the petroleum at any cost in order to end the debilitating blackouts. It’s also attempting to reach new long-term LNG purchase agreements, albeit the conditions will almost probably be harsher than six years ago.

    High risk of default

    The cost is having its own cascading repercussions. The government is now “at high risk of default,” according to a paper published last month by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. Moody’s Investors Service reduced Pakistan’s outlook from stable to negative, citing financial worries including a potential IMF bailout delay.

    Pakistan’s dependency on LNG, as well as its suppliers’ tendency to default, has exacerbated the country’s energy dilemma. Pakistan isn’t alone in this regard. Emerging economies all around the world are trying to meet their residents’ requirements while staying within their budget restrictions.

    It has also prompted them to purchase electricity from Russia, reducing the impact of Europe’s attempts to isolate them.

    Pakistan seeks LNG supply contract with Russian companies

    According to reports, Pakistan is also looking at long-term LNG supply agreements with Russian companies. India has already increased its purchases from Russia, and this trend is likely to continue. The government has directed power plants to purchase fuel from overseas in response to the scorching summer heat.

    Other cash-strapped importers, such as Bangladesh and Myanmar, are likely to suffer as a result of Pakistan’s problems. Bangladesh’s state-owned utility recently purchased the country’s most expensive LNG shipments on the spot market to keep the grids functioning and industry stocked, while Myanmar has stopped importing LNG for the past year owing to price increases.

    Other nations, such as India and Ghana, may be prompted to reconsider long-held plans to increase their reliance on super-chilled fuel as a result of Europe’s major change. Instead, governments would increase their reliance on polluting coal or oil, thwarting efforts to meet ambitious emission reduction objectives this decade.

  • Energy sector to get a massive portion of the Rs699 billion subsidy

    Energy sector to get a massive portion of the Rs699 billion subsidy

    The government has proposed allocating Rs699 billion to multiple sectors in order to provide relief to the masses during the new fiscal year 2022-23.

    According to budget estimates, the government plans to boost subsidies by Rs17 billion to Rs699 billion for the next fiscal year, up from Rs682 billion in the previous fiscal year.

    The government has reduced power sector subsidies by Rs26 billion to Rs570 billion for the next fiscal year, down from Rs596 billion in the previous fiscal year and proposed increasing the total subsidy for the power sector for PEPCO by Rs18 billion to Rs275 billion. The budget 2022-23 proposed reducing the subsidy amount for K-Electric by Rs5 billion to Rs80 billion.

    Moreover, subsidies for Independent Power Producers (IPPs) are slashed by Rs39 billion to Rs215 billion for the coming fiscal year.

    The amount of petroleum subsidy has been upped from Rs51 billion to Rs71 billion. During the next fiscal year, the Utility Stores Corporation (USC) will receive a Rs17 billion subsidy. PASSCO will also receive Rs7 billion subsidy.

    During the next fiscal year, Rs8 billion has been set aside for wheat subsidies to Gilgit-Baltistan. For the coming fiscal year, the subsidy for the metro bus service has been increased to Rs4 billion. Similarly, the fertiliser plant subsidy has been increased to Rs15 billion.

    Read more: Govt unveils Rs9.5 trillion budget 22-23, focused on sustainable growth

    The new government has reduced the Naya Pakistan Housing and Development Authority (NAPHDA) subsidy amount to Rs500 million for the next fiscal year, down from Rs30 billion in the previous fiscal year. NAPHDA’s markup subsidy has also been reduced, from Rs.3 billion to Rs.500 million for the coming fiscal year.

  • PM Shehbaz directs power authorities to reduce load-shedding to two hours

    PM Shehbaz directs power authorities to reduce load-shedding to two hours

    Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif instructed the power authorities on June 4 to reduce load-shedding throughout the country to two hours, alerting that he wanted results rather than explanations.

    As per a report from ARY News, PM Shehbaz Sharif, who presided over a meeting to resolve the challenge of hours-long unexpected load-shedding in the country, asked power division officials and federal ministers to do whatever was essential to reduce load-shedding to two hours per day.

    While dismissing explanations for the duration of load-shedding, PM Shehbaz stated that officials should minimise the sufferings of the general public rather than furnishing justifications.

    “I only wanted to provide relief to the masses and will not accept the ongoing situation of load-shedding,” a defiant PM stated that he will not compromise and will not allow any minister or official to relax until the problem is resolved.

    He instructed officials to work around the clock to bring power to businesses. The prime minister also aimed the finance minister to secure all necessary resources to address the problem. It is worth noting that Pakistan’s generation capacity has deteriorated, with the power disparity reaching over 7,000 megawatts.

    As per power division sources, the country’s electricity demand has risen to 27,200 megawatts due to the hot weather. The length of unannounced load-shedding across the country has also been elevated to 14 hours. “There is a nationwide power production of 20,000MW, resulting in a shortfall of 7200 MW,” they added.

    According to reliable sources, the country presently acquires 4,635 megawatts of electricity from hydropower, 1,060 megawatts from thermal power plants, and 9,677 megawatts from IPPs. Considering the findings, 3 key power companies have shuttered 16 power plants in Pakistan largely owing to a shortage of fuel.

  • Energy crisis worsens, electricity gap surpasses 7,000 megawatts

    Energy crisis worsens, electricity gap surpasses 7,000 megawatts

    The demand for electricity in Pakistan has risen to 28,200 megawatts due to the hot weather, while the supply is only 21,200 megawatts, resulting in a power shortfall of nearly 7,000 megawatts.

    According to well-placed sources, the country currently gets 4,635 megawatts of energy from hydropower, 1,060 megawatts from government thermal power plants, and 9,677 megawatts from IPPs. Additionally, due to a lack of oil, gas, and coal, numerous factories have been shut down.

    Several areas of the country are experiencing daily loadshedding of 10 to 12 hours due to the expanding shortfall, which is exacerbated by the hot heat.

    However, in locations with significant line losses, loadshedding lasts longer than 12 hours.

    The scheduled loadshedding technique is not being used due to the lack of data, according to the sources. In Karachi, K-Electric, the city’s sole electricity distribution provider, is imposing daily loadshedding of 9 to 10 hours.

    As per reports, the loadshedding will be resolved within the next several months.