For
Pakistan, everyday is a blackout with no end in sight
India
may claim the world’s biggest blackout, but in Pakistan an endemic
energy crisis blamed on years of mismanagement cripples the economy
and makes millions of lives a daily misery.
8
August, 2012
Six
weeks after the new prime minister in Islamabad promised the shortage
would be his top priority, blackouts have reached a peak –
reportedly up to 16 hours a day in urban areas and as much as 22
hours a day in the rural parts of the country.
But
with political posturing becoming more acute as the weak coalition
stutters towards general elections, there is no quick end in sight.
Unprecedented
power failures blacked out over half of India for two days last week,
affecting more than 600 million people when three national grids
collapsed.
In
Pakistan, however, shortages day in, day out highlight chronic
underinvestment in infrastructure, long-term planning sacrificed to
short-term expediency, lack of leadership, cronyism and corruption.
For
ordinary people it is almost unbearable, particularly during the holy
month of Ramazan when Muslims fast from dawn to dusk, coinciding this
year with temperatures over 50 degrees Celsius.
Peak
demand for electricity in the summer is around 18,000 megawatts, with
a third of that coming from air-conditioning, but power companies
only manage to supply 13,000 to 14,000 MW.
Angry
protests and riots erupt every few days and the central bank has
warned the energy shortages have effectively put a ceiling on
economic growth.
The
government’s Planning Commission says power cuts shaved three to
four per cent off GDP in the financial year 2010-11, with industry
bearing the brunt.
At
the heart of the problem is so-called “circular debt”, which the
commission says stood at $4.4 billion in 2011-12.
The
dual effect of the government setting low electricity prices and
customers failing to pay for it means state utilities lose money, and
cannot pay private power generating companies, which in turn cannot
pay the oil and gas suppliers, who cut off the supply.
“It’s
a crisis of management, a crisis which has been born out of
indecisiveness, born out of procrastination, not taking the decisions
required at the right time,” said Shahid Sattar, the Planning
Commission’s member for energy.
He
dates the problem to the rule of military ruler Pervez Musharraf,
when a massive boom in demand was not matched by investment in new
power stations.
Raja
Pervez Ashraf, burdened by corruption allegations from his time as
water and energy minister but sworn in as prime minister on June 22
after the Supreme Court sacked his predecessor, promised to fix it.
In
mid-July, a 12-billion-rupee ($127 million) bailout led to a
noticeable let-up in the blackouts, but since then cuts have been as
bad as ever.
Opposition
leaders have sought to make hay, with Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz
Sharif of the Pakistan Muslim League-N (PML-N) backing protests and
complaining vociferously that his province is suffering an unfair
share of the power cuts.
He
has been photographed working in a tent, without fans or
air-conditioning, as a gesture of solidarity with the sweltering
masses.
With
polls expected by April and rivalry fierce between the PPP and the
PML-N, led by Sharif’s brother Nawaz, there is little appetite for
cooperation even on what analysts agree is a “genuine national
crisis”.
But
neither is there a quick solution for whoever wins. The government
needs to pay its bills, but the country also needs to generate more
power.
Major
projects such as the $12 billion Diamer Bhasha dam, which is expected
to generate 4,500 MW, will not come online for another five or six
years.
The
rivers and valleys of the mountainous north may offer more than
50,000 MW of untapped hydroelectric potential, but Sattar says power
generated from it could be unreliable and cannot guarantee year-round
supply.
Coal
reserves have been found in the Thar desert, but the quality is
uncertain and international donors are unwilling to pump money into
such an environmentally damaging form of energy.
The
government is keen to develop nuclear power as it tries to wean
itself off expensive imported hydrocarbons – the country spends 7.5
per cent of GDP on buying fuel, according to the Planning Commission.
There
are currently three nuclear plants generating a total of 740 MW of
power and there are plans to expand this to 8,800 MW, but only by
2030.
Saeed
Alam Siddiqui from the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission said two new
reactors to be built by the end of 2017 would generate an extra 680
MW.
But
as Pakistan is not party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty it
is excluded from trade in nuclear materials and technology, and can
rely only on its neighbour China for help.
Parallel
efforts to reform publicly-owned generating and distribution
companies have met fierce resistance – an attempt to replace the
CEOs of power companies last year ended in failure after industrial
action.With Pakistan’s 180 million population growing rapidly and
demand rising by around 1,500 MW every year, a daunting battle lies
ahead.
If
no solution is found and violent protests continue, political analyst
Hasan Askari warns Pakistan’s ability to function as a state could
be under threat. “If these people can challenge one government they
can challenge any government,” he said. “Violence and agitation
become the normal political style and you never have stability.”
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