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Can Pakistan Make Billions By Going Green? Ft. PET

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Can Pakistan Make Billions By Going Green? Ft. PET



In tonight’s conversation with our special guests, Talha Khan and Hasan Anwer. What was their early life like? What was Talha’s first job and how did his career progress? Why did he go to China for his MBA? What is it like in China? What did he do in the UK? What was his role in McKinsey? Talha’s theatre background? What was Hasan’s first job, and how did his career progress? Why did they end up in PET - Pakistan Environmental Trust? Climate Finance and what project was he working on in California? What was next for him? Coming back to Pakistan, how was the organization formed, and how did things work out? What kind of fuel did they produce? Why did he leave the organization, and what did he do after? What is PET about, and how was it created? What problems are they working to solve? Zero Emissions and why do work on it? Is this economically impacting us? Are there any pros to this? How are they currently addressing this? What impact is Pakistan really making? Is Balochistan fertile, and what opportunities do we have? Carbon as a commodity? Can scaling up the local markets solve our problem? What are they doing to rewild Pakistan? Rewilding Pakistan, and how will it work? How do they envision the Pakistan of 2050? Catch this and a lot more in tonight’s episode.

00:00 Tonight’s guests: Talha Khan, and Hasan Anwer
00:51 Talha’s Journey!
04:01 Talha’s first job - EnterpriseDB
05:04 How did his career progress?
07:12 Why did he go to China for his MBA?
11:02 What is it like in China?
15:16 What did he do in the UK?
15:37 What was his role in McKinsey?
16:38 Why did he move back to Pakistan?
20:27 Talha’s theatre background
21:10 What was Hasan’s early life like?
23:39 What was his first job, and how did his career progress?
26:12 Climate Finance
27:05 What project was he working on in California?
30:49 What was next for him?
32:46 Coming back to Pakistan
35:05 How was the organization formed, and how did things work out?
44:44 What kind of fuel did they produce?
46:36 Why did he leave the organization, and what did he do after?
49:35 How did he end up in PET - Pakistan Environmental Trust?
49:59 What is PET about, and how was it created?
58:00 What problems are they working to solve?
1:00:45 “Zero Emissions”
1:03:08 Is this economically impacting us?
1:06:32 Are there any pros to this?
1:08:11 How are they currently addressing this?
1:10:38 What impact is Pakistan really making?
1:16:11 Cotton farming, and what opportunities do we have?
1:20:29 Carbon as a commodity
1:23:46 Can scaling up the local markets solve our problem?
1:30:52 Rewilding Pakistan - Rhinos
1:34:52 How will it work?
1:39:40 How does Talha envision the Pakistan of 2050?
1:41:55 How does Hasan see Pakistan 28 years from now?


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Expanding Renewable Energy in Pakistan’s Electricity Mix​




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Solar and wind power should be urgently expanded to at least 30 percent of Pakistan’s total electricity capacity by 2030. Photo: World Bank



Highlights​

  • Solar and wind power should be urgently expanded to at least 30 percent of Pakistan’s total electricity generation capacity by 2030, equivalent to around 24,000 Megawatts.
  • Expanding renewable energy can make electricity cheaper, achieve greater energy security, reduce carbon emissions, and help Pakistan save up to $5 billion over the next 20 years.
  • Many sources of fossil fuel generation such as domestic and imported coal are no longer competitive and should be retired or significantly reduced.

Pakistan has tremendous potential to generate solar and wind power. According to the World Bank, utilizing just 0.071 percent of the country’s area for solar photovoltaic (solar PV) power generation would meet Pakistan’s current electricity demand.

Wind is also an abundant resource. Pakistan has several well-known wind corridors and average wind speeds of 7.87 m/s in 10 percent of its windiest areas. However, despite a number of successful projects, the installed capacity of solar and wind energy in Pakistan, at just over 1,500 Megawatts, is just 4 percent of total capacity, equal to around 2 percent of total generation.
Improving the quality of Pakistan’s power supply and strengthening the system’s security requires investment and operational changes. But how much variable renewable energy can the country’s power system absorb? What level is economically optimal?

These questions are addressed in our recently published Variable Renewable Energy Integration and Planning Study.

The report was undertaken by the global engineering and advisory firm Tractebel Engineering GmbH over an 18-month period in close coordination with the Power System Planning Department at Pakistan’s National Transmission & Despatch Company (NTDC) and other key agencies.

The study has helped provide the evidential foundation for the government’s Alternative and Renewable Energy Policy 2019, and the Indicative Generation Capacity Expansion Plan (IGCEP 2047) submitted by NTDC to the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) in March this year. It also confirms Pakistan’s target to increase VRE to 20 percent of its electricity mix by 2025, 30 percent by 2030, and even shows that slightly higher penetrations of solar and wind would be economically beneficial.

To achieve such targets, a massive and immediate expansion of solar and wind is required through competitive bidding which would decrease prices. Efforts to reduce power generation from uneconomic thermal plants (in particular heavy fuel oil) and continued investment in hydropower must continue as well.

The country is currently facing a significant power surplus due to new generation additions and weaker than projected demand, in part due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, Pakistan needs to ensure it avoids a repeat of the boom-and-bust cycle of underinvestment in power generation followed by emergency capacity development that has characterized recent decades. VRE represents a “no regret” option that can be developed relatively quickly and can displace fuel from inefficient thermal plants and reduce various cost and supply risks such as import dependency or delays of major hydropower projects. If VRE targets are met, up to $5 billion could be saved in potential fuel and other costs.


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Share of Variable Renewable Energy (solar and wind) as a percentage of total installed electricity capacity


While there are strong national and provincial motivations for development of domestic coal in Pakistan, including local economic development, jobs, and increased energy security, the economics do not support such a strategy because of recent VRE cost reductions. The report suggests that domestic coal would not be added to the system until at least the early 2030s, and not at all when external costs such as GHG emissions are considered; imported coal remains uneconomic under all scenarios.

Supporting a transition away from domestic coal, for which there are a number of further projects in the pipeline, would be a strong candidate for “climate finance”, in particular supporting the grid investment required to facilitate a rapid expansion of VRE, and introduction of costlier technologies such as concentrating solar power (CSP) and battery storage, as well as increasing the flexibility of large dams where hydropower is often a by-product.

Battery storage and flexibility measures would also help to avoid a major scale-up of open-cycle gas turbines, which might otherwise be required to provide reserves (with or without additional VRE capacity).

Achieving the proposed scale-up of VRE, equivalent to over 24,000 Megawatts of additional capacity by 2030, will require a coordinated and sustained effort by both the federal and provincial governments.

Major investment is needed in the transmission system, including new automation and control systems, as well as regular rounds of competitive bidding based on a clear capacity expansion plan. The World Bank, working closely with other development partners, stands ready to support Pakistan in this endeavor, achieving the goal of affordable, reliable power for all by 2030.

This study was funded by the World Bank’s Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and was prepared by Tractebel Engineering GmbH under contract to the World Bank.

Notes:
  • This study is part of a series of technical assistance studies being implemented by the World Bank, including a “VRE Locational Study” and a “VRE Competitive Bidding Study”. The findings from these studies shall be published once they are finalized.
  • The study utilized advanced modeling capabilities and the latest official data to analyze, at an hourly resolution, projected demand, supply from all sources (existing, planned, and potential), and their relative costs. The model then calculates “optimal” generation profiles for the study horizon, including high level representation of the transmission system (to consider the distribution of demand and available generation sources in different regions across the country) and how the power is dispatched. The latter includes the provision of sufficient reserves for the variability of VRE but also for overall system stability.
  • The World Bank has provided $100 million of financing to the Sindh Solar Energy Project (SSEP), which is supporting utility-scale solar power, distributed solar on and around public buildings, and provision of solar home systems to households with low or no grid access. Further details here.
  • The World Bank has also committed $425 million of financing to the National Transmission Modernization Project (NTMP), which aims at increasing the capacity and reliability of selected segments of the national transmission system in Pakistan and modernizing key business processes of NTDC. Further details here.

 
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