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Who is responsible? By Sartaj Aziz

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How the problem of load shedding spiralled out of hands

The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) is naturally apprehensive about the adverse impact of the unprecedented load-shedding during its tenure on its electoral fortunes in the coming elections. In frustration, it is making desperate efforts to mislead the nation through expensive full page advertisements that “if the PML-N government had not stopped 24,000 MW of power projects in 1997, there would be no load shedding today.”

Since this is a grave national issue whose real importance goes far beyond electoral politics, the truth must be fully explained.

Paradoxically, one of the most important underlying causes of today’s load-shedding was, in fact, the energy policy launched by the PPP government in 1994. With dazzling speed, within three months, the government issued 70 Memorandum of Understandings (MOUs) and Letters of Intent (LOIs) to Independent Power Producers (IPPs) for generating 13,000 MW. By 1995, out of these 70 LOIs, firm Letters of Support (LOS) were issued to 27 parties to generate 6,335 MW of electricity. Most of this capacity came into operation in the next 3-4 years, sowing the seeds of a major energy crisis for the future. This should be clear from the following facts:

The 1994 energy policy brought about a decisive shift in the Pakistan energy mix. In 1994, out of the total installed capacity of 11000 MW, 60 percent came from hydro electricity and only 40 percent from thermal capacity. In the next few years, this mix was reversed from 60:40 to 30:70 in favour of thermal capacity based on imported fuel. Every year, this ratio went down further to 20:80 in winter months as hydel generation was reduced due to lower water flows in the rivers.

In 1994-95, the price of crude oil was $10-15 a barrel and the price of furnace oil was only Rs.2540 per ton. As oil price crossed $100 a barrel from 2008 onwards, the cost of generating one unit at IPP thermal plant has increased manifold to Rs18 per KWh when produced on furnace oil and Rs24 per unit when produced through diesel, while the average sale price of electricity in Pakistan is about Rs9 per KWh. In other words, every unit generated by an IPP involves a subsidy of Rs9 to Rs15 per KWh. That is the root cause of the growing problem of circular debt. Since the government does not have the budgetary resources to provide this subsidy, this huge power sector deficit leads to circular debt, which forces utility companies to borrow from the banking system upto their borrowing limits. After that they do not have the cash to import fuel for the power plants. This fiscal year alone the power sector deficit is expected to contribute over Rs700 billion to the circular debt, and because of the enormous subsidy required, our current installed thermal capacity of 13000 MW (excluding hydel capacity of 6500 MW) is generating less than 6000 MW, causing long hours of load-shedding. So the real issue in load-shedding is not capacity, it is the wrong fuel mix brought about by the 1994 energy policy of the PPP government.

Another serious flaw in the 1994 energy policy was the curious decision to offer a fixed capacity price of 6.5 cents per KWh plus the actual cost of fuel as a pass through item. At that time the average cost of power generated by WAPDA was Rs0.90 per unit and the average sale price was Rs1.50 per unit. In an article which was published in a national English daily on 28 November 1994 (‘The Perils of High Cost Imported Energy’), I had warned that the average sale price will be more than double to Rs3.20 per KWh (10 cents) due to the IPPs. In actual fact, it has gone up six fold, without meeting the actual cost of generation.

The real challenge of a viable and sustainable energy policy is twofold: one in meeting the energy needs through maximum reliance on domestic hydel, coal and renewable resources and second in producing energy at a reasonable cost. The1994 Energy Policy ignored both these challenges, and by increasing dependence on imported oil, created a permanent fault line in the country’s energy system. India generates 70 per cent of its electricity from domestic coal, 12 per cent from hydro and only three per cent from oil. Bangladesh uses gas for 90 per cent of its energy needs and only 5 five from oil. Pakistan, on the other hand, is still dependent on oil for 40 per cent of its electric supply, with 29 per cent each from hydel and gas.

In the past decade, Musharraf government, while contributing to the growth of domestic demand for electricity through large scale provision of bank loans for the purchase of air-conditioners and home appliances, (share of domestic energy consumption had jumped to 46 per cent of the total by 2008), did not add any new capacity to the system.

Poor governance of the outgoing PPP-led coalition in the past five years has further compounded the problem of load-shedding. Transmission losses and electricity theft have reached record levels and size of unpaid electricity bills has been growing. These factors account for at least 10 percent of cumulative burden of circular debt despite 250 per cent increase in electricity tariff. The longer term problem of load-shedding can be solved only if we add to the system generating capacity at a cost that is less than the average sale price of Rs9 per KWh but in the past four years PPP government has added rental power at the exorbitant price of Rs25 per KWh. One can only imagine the size of the circular debt if the IPPs, lined up by PPP during 1994-95, were somehow producing 17,000 MW and not 6000 MW!

Another misleading portion of the PPP ads is the reference to Hubco Power Project. This project was initiated in 1991-92 under the first PML-N government and was completed in 1996. The PPP government which took over in 1993, amended the original agreement to give the company under the 1994 energy policy the full pass through cost of fuel in violation of the original agreement. When the then Ehtesab Bureau detected large kickbacks in lieu of this amendment, the announcement of 12 October 1998 was made in the press. But there was no interruption in the generation of electricity from Hubco. Similarly, the other headlines of June 1998 calling for “cancellation of all agreements with foreign companies” were an exaggerated version of the decision to review the pricing formula which PPP government had egregiously allowed to IPPs, in return for large bribes. No agreements were actually cancelled, but based on the report of an expert committee chaired by late Mr. Shaukat Mirza, some of the prices at which WAPDA was purchasing electricity from IPPs were rationalized.

I hope these facts will clearly show that even at election time there should be a limit on false accusations and distortion of historical facts.

Who is responsible? | Pakistan Today | Latest news | Breaking news | Pakistan News | World news | Business | Sport and Multimedia
 
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And what has the PML-N done to address the problems of massive load-shedding in Punjab? Some areas are seeing 18 hours of load-shedding, but I've not seen them aggressively pursuing solutions over the past 5 years.

What I have seen is Shahbaz Sharif claim that he will end load-shedding in 2 years, and 1 year, and 1 day and all that. But given this is a huge problem for the country, and partly responsible for the economic malaise and closure of industry, how has he been chasing for a solution?

What his party do seem to be pretty good at doing is stealing electricty to help with their election rallies as witnessed just yesterday.

The PML-N stand discredited on this issue, so no need for Sartaj Aziz to climb his high horse and blame everyone except his masters of Raiwind.
 
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Both PML(N) and PPP are responsible for this energy disaster.

PPP wants corrupt IPPs
PML(N) wants to blame PPP

Both fill their pockets and the rest of Pakistan suffers.
 
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Both PML(N) and PPP are responsible for this energy disaster.

PPP wants corrupt IPPs
PML(N) wants to blame PPP

Both fill their pockets and the rest of Pakistan suffers.

Please dont forget the dictatorship of Gen Musharraf too. He never invested in the power sector as he should have also.
 
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Please dont forget the dictatorship of Gen Musharraf too. He never invested in the power sector as he should have also.

Are you on F'ing drugs ?

Can you see how many small and large hydro-Electric projects were initiated by the Musharraf government ?

Are you blaming the economic policies that actually gave RISE to industrial activity and thus power consumption ?

Are you unaware of facts ? or did you fail to study the history ? or do you intentionally lie and mislead readers ?

Had the patriotic angels (a.k.a politicians) stood in line the Kala Bagh damn would have been a reality some 10 years ago !

you are without honor, a shameless excuse and nothing more.
 
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Are you on F'ing drugs ?

Can you see how many small and large hydro-Electric projects were initiated by the Musharraf government ?

Are you blaming the economic policies that actually gave RISE to industrial activity and thus power consumption ?

Are you unaware of facts ? or did you fail to study the history ? or do you intentionally lie and mislead readers ?

Had the patriotic angels (a.k.a politicians) stood in line the Kala Bagh damn would have been a reality some 10 years ago !

you are without honor, a shameless excuse and nothing more.


Can we laugh Sir......??
 
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Are you on F'ing drugs ?

Can you see how many small and large hydro-Electric projects were initiated by the Musharraf government ?

Are you blaming the economic policies that actually gave RISE to industrial activity and thus power consumption ?

Are you unaware of facts ? or did you fail to study the history ? or do you intentionally lie and mislead readers ?

Had the patriotic angels (a.k.a politicians) stood in line the Kala Bagh damn would have been a reality some 10 years ago !

you are without honor, a shameless excuse and nothing more.

There were ZERO Large hydro projects initiated during Gen Musharraf's reign, and the small hydro projects were only a fraction of the power needed. Yes, I am correct. He ignored the power sector just as the other governments.

Rising power consumption was more due to a rise in population and consumer demand and less due to industrial production during the dictatorship.

I will ignore the rest of your post making personal attacks.
 
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There were ZERO Large hydro projects initiated during Gen Musharraf's reign, and the small hydro projects were only a fraction of the power needed. Yes, I am correct. He ignored the power sector just as the other governments.

Rising power consumption was more due to a rise in population and consumer demand and less due to industrial production during the dictatorship.

I will ignore the rest of your post making personal attacks.

Does Diamir Basha Dam remind u of some thing ?

Kala Bagh dam ?

Does Munda dam remind you of some thing ?
Does the small dam on lower indus tributaries ring a memory ?

Does clearing of lower chenab tributaries remind u of some thing ?

The raising of Mangla dam tell you of some thing ?

the expansion of Chashma plant mean anything to you ?

Like I said, you are ill informed, and even less ready to learn.
 
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Does Diamir Basha Dam remind u of some thing ?

Kala Bagh dam ?

Does the small dam on lower indus tributaries ring a memory ?

Does clearing of lower chenab tributaries remind u of some thing ?

Like I said, you are ill informed, and even less ready to learn.

Both Diamer and Kalabagh are decades old projects. Have they been built? I must have missed the news Sir.

What is the power generated by the lower Indus tributary dams or the clearing of the Chenab tributaries?

I am ready to learn the answers Sir.
 
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There were ZERO Large hydro projects initiated during Gen Musharraf's reign, and the small hydro projects were only a fraction of the power needed. Yes, I am correct. He ignored the power sector just as the other governments.

Rising power consumption was more due to a rise in population and consumer demand and less due to industrial production during the dictatorship.

I will ignore the rest of your post making personal attacks.


No no no. Pakistan's GDP actually grew pretty fast in Musharraf's era and industrial growth was also evident. But power projects was where Musharraf needed to focus since there was a rapid rise in demand and the comparable energy production was quite low.

And this had another ill effect: the poor segment found many things had become expensive due to the rapid growth without proper planning. Property for one and consumer pricing for another.
 
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You can laugh all you want, that will only prove yourself a retard.

Another burlesque........ Ok... Every one who "takes" of your beloved "commando" will deem retarded to you...... Please look for another way to "vent" your "fury".... paaa g.....Dont be personal to any one .... Beseech-ed.....
 
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No no no. Pakistan's GDP actually grew pretty fast in Musharraf's era and industrial growth was also evident. But power projects was where Musharraf needed to focus since there was a rapid rise in demand and the comparable energy production was quite low.

And this had another ill effect: the poor segment found many things had become expensive due to the rapid growth without proper planning. Property for one and consumer pricing for another.

You are correct that industrial power demand rose during Gen Musharraf's time, but the real increase in power demand has come from the domestic sector, with rising urbanization and rising consumerism on top of a rising population.

Currently, household power consumption accounts for nearly half of the power demand, while industrial demand consumes about a quarter. And household power demands are rising more rapidly. This has been true for many decades now.
 
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And what has the PML-N done to address the problems of massive load-shedding in Punjab? Some areas are seeing 18 hours of load-shedding, but I've not seen them aggressively pursuing solutions over the past 5 years.

What I have seen is Shahbaz Sharif claim that he will end load-shedding in 2 years, and 1 year, and 1 day and all that. But given this is a huge problem for the country, and partly responsible for the economic malaise and closure of industry, how has he been chasing for a solution?

What his party do seem to be pretty good at doing is stealing electricty to help with their election rallies as witnessed just yesterday.

The PML-N stand discredited on this issue, so no need for Sartaj Aziz to climb his high horse and blame everyone except his masters of Raiwind.

usually i dont get involved in a discussion I know nothing about. Provinces are still not fully capable of generating their own electricity due to lack of any control on power distribution which is still controlled by Wapda a federal entity. what shoud have shebaz sharif done with an electricity generation plant is ran wires to individual homes?. The second issue is all creditor want federal guarantee which PPP govt refuse to provide due to political darama bazi
 
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