Hassan Guy
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2016
- Messages
- 4,892
- Reaction score
- -3
- Country
- Location
Will we use nuclear energy too?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Technically they are adding more than 10,000mw by December 2018 as promised... I was checking the progress of existing projects under CPEC for example... and the early harvest projects will add 10,400mw... except 1 hydro power project which is scheduled to be completed by 2022... all other projects are likely to be completed by December 2018
But when you see the long term projects from 2014-2030 framework most of them are already under construction and have been pushed for early completion from 2020-22 to 2018-19.. some of them also in 2017. Port Qasim and Sahiwal power plants are getting operational one of the two plants each in 2017, almost completed already in record time. Couple of wind and solar powered projects are already operational
That is on top of Non CPEC projects such as Neelum Jhelum Hydro power project adding 969mw in few months, extension of Tarbela IV is also pushed for early completion in 2017 adding 1400mw and various other smaller hydro power projects adding few hundred MW of electricity
I was checking Pakistan's installed capacity of about 23,000mw is already around 27,000mw after completion of various projects in past 3 years. That is why an average load shedding has already dropped from 12-16 hours to just few hours a day... no more protests and cheap publicity by the media. I foresee installed capacity reaching over 40,000mw by December 2018
Partially yes...What the WSJ story really says is that while the GoP has announced great plans, they face huge obstacles to becoming reality. Besides, the problem is not on the installed capacity side. Has the circular debt problem been solved on a durable basis? Nope.
Partially yes...
The overall loss in subsidies have been reduced by over 50%. You can credit lower oil prices partially for that
But there is also some work done in assistance of USAid and several domestic projects for greater efficiency for loss of energy in transmission lines and smart metering.
More than 5 billion dollars are being spent on transmission lines alone a part from energy projects so you can imagine the scale of ongoing work right now
I know,All those measures are good, but the circular debt keeps piling up:
http://www.dawn.com/news/1246976
The real issues remain, and Pakistan will not be rid of loadshedding for the foreseeable future.
I know,
The point I am trying to make it, we are apparently on the right track. The problem will not be resolved overnight. We used to provide subsidy of over 200 billion rupees few years ago, I remember around 225 billion rupees in 2011 or 2012... and that is on top of creating artificial loadshedding for 12-16 hours a day.
Now half amount is being subsidized after loadsheddint of only 4-6 hours a day. It will hopefully be resolved by 2020 after Matiari to Lahore and Faisalabad transmission lines and Neelum jhelum to Gujranawala transmission and smart metering have been introduced to several cities by then...
The point is, we are not longer generating elecricity for 18-24 rupees per unit and selling for 8-12 rupees per unit... the average cost is dropped to 12 rupees per unit including line losses and electricity theft
Its likely to come under 9 rupees per unit by 2020
Technically they are adding more than 10,000mw by December 2018 as promised... I was checking the progress of existing projects under CPEC for example... and the early harvest projects will add 10,400mw... except 1 hydro power project which is scheduled to be completed by 2022... all other projects are likely to be completed by December 2018
But when you see the long term projects from 2014-2030 framework most of them are already under construction and have been pushed for early completion from 2020-22 to 2018-19.. some of them also in 2017. Port Qasim and Sahiwal power plants are getting operational one of the two plants each in 2017, almost completed already in record time. Couple of wind and solar powered projects are already operational
That is on top of Non CPEC projects such as Neelum Jhelum Hydro power project adding 969mw in few months, extension of Tarbela IV is also pushed for early completion in 2017 adding 1400mw and various other smaller hydro power projects adding few hundred MW of electricity
I was checking Pakistan's installed capacity of about 23,000mw is already around 27,000mw after completion of various projects in past 3 years. That is why an average load shedding has already dropped from 12-16 hours to just few hours a day... no more protests and cheap publicity by the media. I foresee installed capacity reaching over 40,000mw by December 2018
Do you think we can reach our goal of 162,000MW by 2030?Technically they are adding more than 10,000mw by December 2018 as promised... I was checking the progress of existing projects under CPEC for example... and the early harvest projects will add 10,400mw... except 1 hydro power project which is scheduled to be completed by 2022... all other projects are likely to be completed by December 2018
But when you see the long term projects from 2014-2030 framework most of them are already under construction and have been pushed for early completion from 2020-22 to 2018-19.. some of them also in 2017. Port Qasim and Sahiwal power plants are getting operational one of the two plants each in 2017, almost completed already in record time. Couple of wind and solar powered projects are already operational
That is on top of Non CPEC projects such as Neelum Jhelum Hydro power project adding 969mw in few months, extension of Tarbela IV is also pushed for early completion in 2017 adding 1400mw and various other smaller hydro power projects adding few hundred MW of electricity
I was checking Pakistan's installed capacity of about 23,000mw is already around 27,000mw after completion of various projects in past 3 years. That is why an average load shedding has already dropped from 12-16 hours to just few hours a day... no more protests and cheap publicity by the media. I foresee installed capacity reaching over 40,000mw by December 2018
Not at all but that goal is further revised to around 135,000mw which is also not likely to happen.Do you think we can reach our goal of 162,000MW by 2030?
What I can say for sure is, Pakistan will have about 50,000mw of installed capacity by 2022... as all these projects are already under construction (Neelum jhelum, extension of tarbala, 17045mw from cpec, various small dams under construction, wind and solar projects etc)
Technically they are adding more than 10,000mw by December 2018 as promised... I was checking the progress of existing projects under CPEC for example... and the early harvest projects will add 10,400mw... except 1 hydro power project which is scheduled to be completed by 2022... all other projects are likely to be completed by December 2018
But when you see the long term projects from 2014-2030 framework most of them are already under construction and have been pushed for early completion from 2020-22 to 2018-19.. some of them also in 2017. Port Qasim and Sahiwal power plants are getting operational one of the two plants each in 2017, almost completed already in record time. Couple of wind and solar powered projects are already operational
That is on top of Non CPEC projects such as Neelum Jhelum Hydro power project adding 969mw in few months, extension of Tarbela IV is also pushed for early completion in 2017 adding 1400mw and various other smaller hydro power projects adding few hundred MW of electricity
I was checking Pakistan's installed capacity of about 23,000mw is already around 27,000mw after completion of various projects in past 3 years. That is why an average load shedding has already dropped from 12-16 hours to just few hours a day... no more protests and cheap publicity by the media. I foresee installed capacity reaching over 40,000mw by December 2018
When did it reach 650 billion rupees? It was only 320 or so billion rupees till last month's report of planning commission?That is good news, but the circular debt is already above Rs 650 billion (yet again), and rising steadily.