AnnoyingOrange
BANNED
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2012
- Messages
- 4,251
- Reaction score
- -27
- Country
- Location
Pakistan's incoming prime minister Nawaz Sharif said Tuesday it was a "tragedy" that a country with a nuclear arsenal was crippled by chronic electricity shortages.
Years of mismanagement, underinvestment and corruption in the power sector have led to blackouts of up to 20 hours a day in the blistering heat of summer, when temperatures reach up to 50 Celsius (122 Fahrenheit).
Sharif vowed to build new power plants to tackle the problem, which acts as a huge drag on the economy -- shaving up to four percent off GDP, according to the Planning Commission.
But he warned there would be no quick fix.
In a speech marking the 15th anniversary of Pakistan's first succesful nuclear weapons test, Sharif -- who was prime minister at the time -- said it was shameful that the country struggled so badly just to keep the lights on.
"It's a tragedy that a country with atomic weapons is deprived of electricity and has no electricity for even 20 hours a day. How can a country develop in such a situation?" he said.
The hated power cuts, known euphemistically as "loadshedding", were arguably the single biggest voter complaint in the runup to the May 11 general election, which Sharif's party won -- a far bigger daily concern than Taliban violence.
Violent protests over power cuts erupt every summer. On Monday thousands of demonstrators took to the streets in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, pelting police with stones.
Wealthy steel magnate Sharif said his government would build more dams to exploit Pakistan's huge hydroelectric potential, as well as more coal-fired power stations, and would seek help from allies China and Turkey.
He said foreign firms setting up power projects would be allowed to repatriate profits, but warned against expectations of a swift end to the crisis.
"Please do not expect that we will solve this energy problems in days," he told an audience in the eastern city of Lahore.
"We will try our best and will use all our resources to solve this problem but you will have to show patience. I cannot give you an exact timeframe but I will struggle and will do my best."
'Tragedy' Pakistan has nukes but no power: Sharif - The West Australian
Years of mismanagement, underinvestment and corruption in the power sector have led to blackouts of up to 20 hours a day in the blistering heat of summer, when temperatures reach up to 50 Celsius (122 Fahrenheit).
Sharif vowed to build new power plants to tackle the problem, which acts as a huge drag on the economy -- shaving up to four percent off GDP, according to the Planning Commission.
But he warned there would be no quick fix.
In a speech marking the 15th anniversary of Pakistan's first succesful nuclear weapons test, Sharif -- who was prime minister at the time -- said it was shameful that the country struggled so badly just to keep the lights on.
"It's a tragedy that a country with atomic weapons is deprived of electricity and has no electricity for even 20 hours a day. How can a country develop in such a situation?" he said.
The hated power cuts, known euphemistically as "loadshedding", were arguably the single biggest voter complaint in the runup to the May 11 general election, which Sharif's party won -- a far bigger daily concern than Taliban violence.
Violent protests over power cuts erupt every summer. On Monday thousands of demonstrators took to the streets in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, pelting police with stones.
Wealthy steel magnate Sharif said his government would build more dams to exploit Pakistan's huge hydroelectric potential, as well as more coal-fired power stations, and would seek help from allies China and Turkey.
He said foreign firms setting up power projects would be allowed to repatriate profits, but warned against expectations of a swift end to the crisis.
"Please do not expect that we will solve this energy problems in days," he told an audience in the eastern city of Lahore.
"We will try our best and will use all our resources to solve this problem but you will have to show patience. I cannot give you an exact timeframe but I will struggle and will do my best."
'Tragedy' Pakistan has nukes but no power: Sharif - The West Australian