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Pakistan OKs plans to build dam on Indus river

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By Zeeshan Haider Zeeshan Haider
Tue Nov 11, 2008

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistan approved on Tuesday a plan to build a dam on the Indus river at a cost of more than $12 billion as part of efforts to overcome an acute power shortage.

Pakistan is suffering from a power deficit of up to 5,000 MW and state utilities are implementing load-shedding, or switching off power to different areas for several hours a day, across the country to make up for the shortage.

The government had approved the construction of the Bhasha dam project in the Gilgit region in the north which will produce 4,500 MW of electricity and include a reservoir for 8.1 million acre feet of water, a government minister said.

"This is a great project for the Pakistani nation," Minister for Water and Power Raja Pervez Ashraf told a news conference after a meeting of the executive committee of the National Economic Council, which deals with development projects.

The project would cost $12.6 billion and would be completed in seven years, he said.

Ashraf said pre-qualification bids for the dam, a diversion tunnel and an underground power station would be held on November 30.

The National Economic Council sanctioned $745 million for acquisition of land for the dam and compensation to people affected by the project, the government said in a statement.

Ashraf said 28,000 people would be affected.

The construction of reservoirs and dams is sensitive in Pakistan where down-river provinces, such as Sindh in the south, complain that they risk being deprived of their fair share of water.

Former president Pervez Musharraf campaigned for the construction of the Kalabagh dam on the Indus river, a considerable distance downstream from Gilgit.

But Musharraf abandoned his efforts to get the dam built after opposition from three of the country's four provinces, which feared Punjab, the main agricultural province, would siphon off an unfair amount of water.

The seven-month-old civilian government that came to power this year has shelved plans for the Kalabagh dam and has promised projects that do not raise controversy to meet the energy shortage.

None of the provinces has raised objections to the Bhasha dam, apparently because its location in a northern mountain valley has eased fears that Punjab can take an unfair share of water.

About a third of the country's power generation capacity of 19,566 MW comes from hydro-electricity, with most of the rest produced by thermal plants.

The demand for electricity in Pakistan is projected to grow by 8.7 percent a year.
 
Let's hope for the practical implementation of this plan.

This is exactly where the hurdles start, when it comes off the paper. Cost escalations, buying land, raw materials, transport, timely release of funds etc. Ultimately comes Babudom, the biggest hurdle, Bureaucracy.
 
This is exactly where the hurdles start, when it comes off the paper. Cost escalations, buying land, raw materials, transport, timely release of funds etc. Ultimately comes Babudom, the biggest hurdle, Bureaucracy.

Rightly said. Govt should make it quick. Already 27 years have been wasted in feasibility study and engineering design analysis.
 
I'll believe it when it happens.

They are planning diversion tunnels. The land over where its built, people will be pissed off. There'll be stories of how x number of villages would be submerged under water... bla.

Dams are a nonstarter in Pakistan.
 
i hope it will finish at time and people get some relex on power shortage
 

ISLAMABAD: The Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC) approved the ‘Up-gradation of Karakuram Highway with cost of Rs 12.058 billion to facilitate the Bhasha dam. The ECNEC meeting was held her under the Chairmanship of Adviser to Prime Minister on Finance Shaukat Tarin. The council considered a number of development projects for approval in the field of energy, environment, supply of clean water, highways, and railways. The development projects considered on Tuesday for the approval are to be completed in all the four provinces, Northern Areas and AJK.

The ECNEC also approved the reconstruction of projects of Rawalakot worth Rs 8.202 billion and Bagh worth Rs 7.349 billion, which were affected by 2005 earthquake. The ECNEC also approved rehabilitation and widening of earthquake-affected road, Alpuiri-Besham section of N-90 worth Rs 874.170 million. The ECNEC discussed replacement of Railway signaling system for the sector Lodhran-Shahdaram, double gauge tracks for Mirpur Khas- Khokarapar, and, double railway track for Lodhran-Khanewal sector. In the communication sector among others, the ECNEC approved the 106km road project for acquisition of land and procurement for Hasanabdal-Havallan- Mansehra Expressway worth Rs 2.997 billion. In the energy sector, the meeting approved ‘Interconnection of 9 IPP’s with National Grid’ worth Rs1.185 billion to ensure generation of additional 1600MW of electricity.

The committee also approved power distributions enhancement project phase-1 to reduce energy/line losses worth Rs 908.590 million. In the water sector, the ECNEC approved capacity building and advisory services project and advised ministry of Water and Power to initiate the process.
 

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