Alarm mounts as wind power turbines halt after govt stops purchases

mhafeez

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Investors in the Jhimpir Wind Corridor are alarmed as their projects have now suffered an unprecedented shutdown of six consecutive days since the federal government halted all offtake from their wind farms.

5dec5e6781061.jpg


“We had been seeing depressed offtake for almost two months now,” a leading investor in the project who did not wish to be identified by name tells Dawn. He says they saw between zero and 10MW evacuated on certain days over the last few months.

“But now the situation has turned alarming since we have seen six days with no offtake. Our turbines are standing idle while the government tells us that there is not enough power demand in the country.”

The Jhimpir Wind Corridor has total installed capacity of 980MW. Three plants in Gharo, adjacent to Jhimpir but closer to the coastline, are seeing continuing offtake because the K-Electric is continuing its purchases of renewable energy. All those that sell to the Central Power Purchasing Agency (CPPA) have been curtailed to zero, says Danish Iqbal, chairman Pakistan Wind Energy Association that represents investors’ interests in the corridor.

Meanwhile, another investor says the government is continuing to buy power from coal and regasified liquefied natural gas plants, and laments that these are pollution intensive options as well as reliant on imported fuels. Power ministry officials, for their part, have told the investors that thermal plants are superior options because they are closer to load centres in Punjab and a safer option for system stability.


Close to 980MW of renewable energy capacity idled as demand collapses

Renewable power plants have no capacity payments in their Power Purchase Agreements, so curtailment of power evacuation for them means no revenue. “We already have the circular debt as a problem that we are dealing with, now we don’t even have enough to invoice the government to meet our upcoming debt service payments, which were predicated on power offtake,” one investor tells Dawn.

The plants do not factor on any merit order list since they are commissioned on a “must-run” basis, which means so long as they have power due to availability of wind, they will generate and sell to the government. But ministry officials are telling the investors that other plants, such as hydro and nuclear that are currently contributing close to 5,500MW out of total demand of 8,500MW in the country are also on “must-run” basis and curtailment there is physically not possible.

The association has met with government representatives from the ministry, the CPPA (the market operator for power), and the National Transmission and Despatch Company. The last contact was on Wednesday, but the curtailment continued unabated.

“Our financial situation is now very, very precarious” one investor says. Dawn spoke with a number of parties who have stakes in the corridor and all of them preferred to stay in the background.

“The majority of the projects in the corridor involve foreign investors with foreign lending as well. Our counterparts abroad are also worried now about the financial viability of their investments. Almost 70 per cent of our annual power generation takes place in the summer months, if this sort of a situation was to arise in those months it would spell our doom.”

Confidence in the government commitments to ensure offtake from renewable projects that come without capacity payments has been impacted as a result of this prolonged curtailment.

“Prime Minister has put up his vision to bring 30pc of power generation through renewable by 2030 but if you have these expensive base load plants on must run basis on imported RLNG and coal, they will never allow renewables to gain space in the grid,” says Danish Iqbal.

Power Minister Omar Ayub could not be reached for comments despite several attempts.


Published in Dawn, December 8th, 2019


 
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Nice2MU

President (40k+ posts)
مسٹر پٹواری ذرا اپنے گنجوں سے پوچھوں کہ اتنے سارے تیل اور کوئلے بلا وجہ کے پراجیکٹس کیوں لگائے تھے اور ان میں کیپسٹی ہے منٹ کے معاہدے بھی ہیں۔ جب تک ان معاہدوں کی مدت ختم نہیں ہوتی یہ مسلہ بنا رہیگا۔
 

Digital_Pakistani

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Published in Dawn, December 8th, 2019

No one will like to read news from an anti-Pakistani newspaper that is hiding its wrongs under the shelter of democracy.
 

mhafeez

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
مسٹر پٹواری ذرا اپنے گنجوں سے پوچھوں کہ اتنے سارے تیل اور کوئلے بلا وجہ کے پراجیکٹس کیوں لگائے تھے اور ان میں کیپسٹی ہے منٹ کے معاہدے بھی ہیں۔ جب تک ان معاہدوں کی مدت ختم نہیں ہوتی یہ مسلہ بنا رہیگا۔

تیل کا کوئی پراجیکٹ نہیں لگایا ، البتہ آپ کی حکومت نے مہنگےفرنس آئل کے پلانٹ چلا کر بیڑہ غرق کیا ، کوئلے سے سستی بجلی بنتی ہے
 

Nice2MU

President (40k+ posts)
تیل کا کوئی پراجیکٹ نہیں لگایا ، البتہ آپ کی حکومت نے مہنگےفرنس آئل کے پلانٹ چلا کر بیڑہ غرق کیا ، کوئلے سے سستی بجلی بنتی ہے

یہ کوئلے کا پراجیکٹس کس نے ساہیوال میں لگایا جسکے لیے کوئلہ بھی باہر سے آئیگا؟

اور یہ نندی پور کو کس نے چند ارب سے 58 ارب پہ پہنچا دیا تھا؟
 

AhmadSaleem264

Minister (2k+ posts)
مسٹر پٹواری ذرا اپنے گنجوں سے پوچھوں کہ اتنے سارے تیل اور کوئلے بلا وجہ کے پراجیکٹس کیوں لگائے تھے اور ان میں کیپسٹی ہے منٹ کے معاہدے بھی ہیں۔ جب تک ان معاہدوں کی مدت ختم نہیں ہوتی یہ مسلہ بنا رہیگا۔
On point.
Bhakki and other LNG and coal plants were indeed the project of shareefs
 

Shahid Abassi

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
حفیظ بھائی۔ معاف کیجئے گا ، کچھ ہنسی اور کچھ رونا آتا ہے جب آپ ایسی خبریں لگاتے ہیں۔
لیٹ می ایکسپلین
۔۱) ملک میں بجلی کا نیٹ ورک ۱۸۵۰۰ میگاواٹ سے زیادہ لوڈ نہی اٹھا سکتا، لیکن بجلی پیدا ہو رہی ہے ۲۹۳۰۰ میگاواٹ۔
۔۲) ملک میں گیارہ ہزار میگاواٹ کے ایسے نئے کارخانے لگے ہیں جہاں نواز حکومت نے ان کی سو فیصد بجلی خریدنے کی گارنٹی دی ہے۔ بجلی نہ خرید سکنے کی صورت میں اس کارخانوں کو کیپیسٹی پر ادائیگیاں کرنی پڑ رہی ہیں۔ نواز حکومت کے بجلی کے پراجیکٹ کچھ ایسے ہیں کہ مثلا بندہ ایک ڈیم تو بنا لے لیکن پانی کی ترسیل کے لئے یہ کہہ کر نہریں کھودنے سے انکار کردے کہ ان پر پیسہ لگانے کا کیا فائدہ اس سے کونسا ووٹ ملنے ہیں۔
۔۳) کیا آپ ہمیں بتا سکتے ہیں کہ جب سردیوں کی وجہ سے آج کل ڈیمانڈ (اس آرٹیکل کے مطابق) ۸۵۰۰ ہے اور اس میں سے بھی ۵۰۰۰ میگاواٹ نیوکلئر اور ہائیڈرو کی دو روپئے یونٹ والی سستی بجلی ہے تو سسٹم میں سرکلر ڈیٹ کہاں سے آرہا ہے۔ یقیناً اس کی وجہ وہ چینی کارخانے ہیں جو ڈیمانڈ نہ ہونے کی وجہ سے بند پڑے ہیں لیکن انہیں سو فیصد کیپیسٹی کی ادا ئیگیاں مسلسل کی جارہی ہیں۔
۔۴) کیا آپ جانتے ہیں کہ اگست سے اکتوبر تک سوئی گیس کی پراڈکشن بند کرنی پڑی تھی کیونکہ قطر سے میاں صاحب کے معائدے کے تحت ہمیں ہر صورت مختص مقدار میں قطر سے گیس اٹھانی تھی جبکہ کھپت اس سے کم تھی۔
اب میاں صاحب کی قطر گیس کمپنی اور چینی بجلی کے کارخانوں کو دی گئیں گارنٹیاں نہ صرف پاکستانی عوام بلکہ وِنڈ ملز آپریٹرز کو ہیوی پرائس ادا کرنے پر مجبور کر رہی ہیں۔
 

patwari_slayer

Senator (1k+ posts)
Investors in the Jhimpir Wind Corridor are alarmed as their projects have now suffered an unprecedented shutdown of six consecutive days since the federal government halted all offtake from their wind farms.

5dec5e6781061.jpg


“We had been seeing depressed offtake for almost two months now,” a leading investor in the project who did not wish to be identified by name tells Dawn. He says they saw between zero and 10MW evacuated on certain days over the last few months.

“But now the situation has turned alarming since we have seen six days with no offtake. Our turbines are standing idle while the government tells us that there is not enough power demand in the country.”

The Jhimpir Wind Corridor has total installed capacity of 980MW. Three plants in Gharo, adjacent to Jhimpir but closer to the coastline, are seeing continuing offtake because the K-Electric is continuing its purchases of renewable energy. All those that sell to the Central Power Purchasing Agency (CPPA) have been curtailed to zero, says Danish Iqbal, chairman Pakistan Wind Energy Association that represents investors’ interests in the corridor.

Meanwhile, another investor says the government is continuing to buy power from coal and regasified liquefied natural gas plants, and laments that these are pollution intensive options as well as reliant on imported fuels. Power ministry officials, for their part, have told the investors that thermal plants are superior options because they are closer to load centres in Punjab and a safer option for system stability.



Renewable power plants have no capacity payments in their Power Purchase Agreements, so curtailment of power evacuation for them means no revenue. “We already have the circular debt as a problem that we are dealing with, now we don’t even have enough to invoice the government to meet our upcoming debt service payments, which were predicated on power offtake,” one investor tells Dawn.

The plants do not factor on any merit order list since they are commissioned on a “must-run” basis, which means so long as they have power due to availability of wind, they will generate and sell to the government. But ministry officials are telling the investors that other plants, such as hydro and nuclear that are currently contributing close to 5,500MW out of total demand of 8,500MW in the country are also on “must-run” basis and curtailment there is physically not possible.

The association has met with government representatives from the ministry, the CPPA (the market operator for power), and the National Transmission and Despatch Company. The last contact was on Wednesday, but the curtailment continued unabated.

“Our financial situation is now very, very precarious” one investor says. Dawn spoke with a number of parties who have stakes in the corridor and all of them preferred to stay in the background.

“The majority of the projects in the corridor involve foreign investors with foreign lending as well. Our counterparts abroad are also worried now about the financial viability of their investments. Almost 70 per cent of our annual power generation takes place in the summer months, if this sort of a situation was to arise in those months it would spell our doom.”

Confidence in the government commitments to ensure offtake from renewable projects that come without capacity payments has been impacted as a result of this prolonged curtailment.

“Prime Minister has put up his vision to bring 30pc of power generation through renewable by 2030 but if you have these expensive base load plants on must run basis on imported RLNG and coal, they will never allow renewables to gain space in the grid,” says Danish Iqbal.

Power Minister Omar Ayub could not be reached for comments despite several attempts.


Published in Dawn, December 8th, 2019


DAWN ??

AAur post krne wala wo chutoya jo 1200 bndo ka survey krke kehta hy more than half Pakistan thinks Imran Khan is incompetent.

What an incompetent math fail loser ??
 

Sonya Khan

Minister (2k+ posts)
حفیظ بھائی۔ معاف کیجئے گا ، کچھ ہنسی اور کچھ رونا آتا ہے جب آپ ایسی خبریں لگاتے ہیں۔
لیٹ می ایکسپلین
۔۱) ملک میں بجلی کا نیٹ ورک ۱۸۵۰۰ میگاواٹ سے زیادہ لوڈ نہی اٹھا سکتا، لیکن بجلی پیدا ہو رہی ہے ۲۹۳۰۰ میگاواٹ۔
۔۲) ملک میں گیارہ ہزار میگاواٹ کے ایسے نئے کارخانے لگے ہیں جہاں نواز حکومت نے ان کی سو فیصد بجلی خریدنے کی گارنٹی دی ہے۔ بجلی نہ خرید سکنے کی صورت میں اس کارخانوں کو کیپیسٹی پر ادائیگیاں کرنی پڑ رہی ہیں۔ نواز حکومت کے بجلی کے پراجیکٹ کچھ ایسے ہیں کہ مثلا بندہ ایک ڈیم تو بنا لے لیکن پانی کی ترسیل کے لئے یہ کہہ کر نہریں کھودنے سے انکار کردے کہ ان پر پیسہ لگانے کا کیا فائدہ اس سے کونسا ووٹ ملنے ہیں۔
۔۳) کیا آپ ہمیں بتا سکتے ہیں کہ جب سردیوں کی وجہ سے آج کل ڈیمانڈ (اس آرٹیکل کے مطابق) ۸۵۰۰ ہے اور اس میں سے بھی ۵۰۰۰ میگاواٹ نیوکلئر اور ہائیڈرو کی دو روپئے یونٹ والی سستی بجلی ہے تو سسٹم میں سرکلر ڈیٹ کہاں سے آرہا ہے۔ یقیناً اس کی وجہ وہ چینی کارخانے ہیں جو ڈیمانڈ نہ ہونے کی وجہ سے بند پڑے ہیں لیکن انہیں سو فیصد کیپیسٹی کی ادا ئیگیاں مسلسل کی جارہی ہیں۔
۔۴) کیا آپ جانتے ہیں کہ اگست سے اکتوبر تک سوئی گیس کی پراڈکشن بند کرنی پڑی تھی کیونکہ قطر سے میاں صاحب کے معائدے کے تحت ہمیں ہر صورت مختص مقدار میں قطر سے گیس اٹھانی تھی جبکہ کھپت اس سے کم تھی۔
اب میاں صاحب کی قطر گیس کمپنی اور چینی بجلی کے کارخانوں کو دی گئیں گارنٹیاں نہ صرف پاکستانی عوام بلکہ وِنڈ ملز آپریٹرز کو ہیوی پرائس ادا کرنے پر مجبور کر رہی ہیں۔
Also would like to add that the additional gas in the system was an existential threat as it could lead to rupture of the pipelines .....
 

mhafeez

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
News published by Dawn today titled “Pak-Iran Forces jointly conduct border patrolling” is factually incorrect. There is no joint patrolling anywhere on Pakistani Borders. Patrolling/ operations if required are always on respective sides by respective forces through coordination. DG ISPR
https://twitter.com/x/status/1203983021344460801

Radio Pakistan also spreading fake news??

Same was reported by APP.


Iranian News Agency and many others

 

EngrHaseebShahid

Minister (2k+ posts)
Investors in the Jhimpir Wind Corridor are alarmed as their projects have now suffered an unprecedented shutdown of six consecutive days since the federal government halted all offtake from their wind farms.

5dec5e6781061.jpg


“We had been seeing depressed offtake for almost two months now,” a leading investor in the project who did not wish to be identified by name tells Dawn. He says they saw between zero and 10MW evacuated on certain days over the last few months.

“But now the situation has turned alarming since we have seen six days with no offtake. Our turbines are standing idle while the government tells us that there is not enough power demand in the country.”

The Jhimpir Wind Corridor has total installed capacity of 980MW. Three plants in Gharo, adjacent to Jhimpir but closer to the coastline, are seeing continuing offtake because the K-Electric is continuing its purchases of renewable energy. All those that sell to the Central Power Purchasing Agency (CPPA) have been curtailed to zero, says Danish Iqbal, chairman Pakistan Wind Energy Association that represents investors’ interests in the corridor.

Meanwhile, another investor says the government is continuing to buy power from coal and regasified liquefied natural gas plants, and laments that these are pollution intensive options as well as reliant on imported fuels. Power ministry officials, for their part, have told the investors that thermal plants are superior options because they are closer to load centres in Punjab and a safer option for system stability.



Renewable power plants have no capacity payments in their Power Purchase Agreements, so curtailment of power evacuation for them means no revenue. “We already have the circular debt as a problem that we are dealing with, now we don’t even have enough to invoice the government to meet our upcoming debt service payments, which were predicated on power offtake,” one investor tells Dawn.

The plants do not factor on any merit order list since they are commissioned on a “must-run” basis, which means so long as they have power due to availability of wind, they will generate and sell to the government. But ministry officials are telling the investors that other plants, such as hydro and nuclear that are currently contributing close to 5,500MW out of total demand of 8,500MW in the country are also on “must-run” basis and curtailment there is physically not possible.

The association has met with government representatives from the ministry, the CPPA (the market operator for power), and the National Transmission and Despatch Company. The last contact was on Wednesday, but the curtailment continued unabated.

“Our financial situation is now very, very precarious” one investor says. Dawn spoke with a number of parties who have stakes in the corridor and all of them preferred to stay in the background.

“The majority of the projects in the corridor involve foreign investors with foreign lending as well. Our counterparts abroad are also worried now about the financial viability of their investments. Almost 70 per cent of our annual power generation takes place in the summer months, if this sort of a situation was to arise in those months it would spell our doom.”

Confidence in the government commitments to ensure offtake from renewable projects that come without capacity payments has been impacted as a result of this prolonged curtailment.

“Prime Minister has put up his vision to bring 30pc of power generation through renewable by 2030 but if you have these expensive base load plants on must run basis on imported RLNG and coal, they will never allow renewables to gain space in the grid,” says Danish Iqbal.

Power Minister Omar Ayub could not be reached for comments despite several attempts.


Published in Dawn, December 8th, 2019


ghatiyaa phatwari ka ghatiyaa thread
 

Citizen X

President (40k+ posts)
Its winter, obviously demand is less. What do they want, noora and zardaku raj type contracts, whether they produce power or not, they keep getting paid for it? This is why we have such a huge problem of circular debt in the first place.

Only thing is, wind farm power is more cleaner, but we haven't reached that financial status that we can afford expensive electricity when cheaper options are avilable, why its more expensive is explained in the article.

The whole article is nothing but a business man's rant. Like a shop selling ACs complaining business is down in winter
 

mhafeez

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
حفیظ بھائی۔ معاف کیجئے گا ، کچھ ہنسی اور کچھ رونا آتا ہے جب آپ ایسی خبریں لگاتے ہیں۔
لیٹ می ایکسپلین
۔۱) ملک میں بجلی کا نیٹ ورک ۱۸۵۰۰ میگاواٹ سے زیادہ لوڈ نہی اٹھا سکتا، لیکن بجلی پیدا ہو رہی ہے ۲۹۳۰۰ میگاواٹ۔
۔۲) ملک میں گیارہ ہزار میگاواٹ کے ایسے نئے کارخانے لگے ہیں جہاں نواز حکومت نے ان کی سو فیصد بجلی خریدنے کی گارنٹی دی ہے۔ بجلی نہ خرید سکنے کی صورت میں اس کارخانوں کو کیپیسٹی پر ادائیگیاں کرنی پڑ رہی ہیں۔ نواز حکومت کے بجلی کے پراجیکٹ کچھ ایسے ہیں کہ مثلا بندہ ایک ڈیم تو بنا لے لیکن پانی کی ترسیل کے لئے یہ کہہ کر نہریں کھودنے سے انکار کردے کہ ان پر پیسہ لگانے کا کیا فائدہ اس سے کونسا ووٹ ملنے ہیں۔
۔۳) کیا آپ ہمیں بتا سکتے ہیں کہ جب سردیوں کی وجہ سے آج کل ڈیمانڈ (اس آرٹیکل کے مطابق) ۸۵۰۰ ہے اور اس میں سے بھی ۵۰۰۰ میگاواٹ نیوکلئر اور ہائیڈرو کی دو روپئے یونٹ والی سستی بجلی ہے تو سسٹم میں سرکلر ڈیٹ کہاں سے آرہا ہے۔ یقیناً اس کی وجہ وہ چینی کارخانے ہیں جو ڈیمانڈ نہ ہونے کی وجہ سے بند پڑے ہیں لیکن انہیں سو فیصد کیپیسٹی کی ادا ئیگیاں مسلسل کی جارہی ہیں۔
۔۴) کیا آپ جانتے ہیں کہ اگست سے اکتوبر تک سوئی گیس کی پراڈکشن بند کرنی پڑی تھی کیونکہ قطر سے میاں صاحب کے معائدے کے تحت ہمیں ہر صورت مختص مقدار میں قطر سے گیس اٹھانی تھی جبکہ کھپت اس سے کم تھی۔
اب میاں صاحب کی قطر گیس کمپنی اور چینی بجلی کے کارخانوں کو دی گئیں گارنٹیاں نہ صرف پاکستانی عوام بلکہ وِنڈ ملز آپریٹرز کو ہیوی پرائس ادا کرنے پر مجبور کر رہی ہیں۔

آپ نے پہلے تو کچھ مغالطے دور کرلیں​

1) At the transmission level, the available system can transfer 25,339 MW (end-FY18) at 220 KV level.

2) Following are important insights about power tariffs:

(i)If a power producer does not sell even a single unit into the national grid, it will still be paid for the capacity charge (fuel charge will be zero in this case) that will eventually be included in the retail tariff;
(ii)Depreciation of the Pak rupee and/or increase in domestic or foreign interest rate increase the capacity charge and the retail tariff;
(iii)If a new generation plant is installed, the overall revenue requirement for the capacity charge will increase. If this new plant operates at 100 percent capacity and is able to sell every single unit it produces, the capacity charge in terms of Rs/kWhwill remain unchanged. However, if it does not operate at full capacity, the capacity charge in terms of Rs/kWhwill increase, and so will the end-user tariff.
(iv)Ifthe thermal power composition shifts in favor of expensive fuels, say due to shortage of cheaper fuels, the energy charge in terms of Rs/kWhwill increase.
(v)If the merit order list is not followed and inefficient plants are allowed to dispatch ahead of the efficient ones, the energy charge will increase.
(vi)If Nepraallows Discos to include more transmission and distribution (T&D) losses as part of their tariff build-up, the end-user tariff will increase.
(vii)Additional staff hiring, if allowed by Nepra, at any stage of the power sector changes in fuel prices in the global market.Either of these can automatically increase (or decrease)the generation costs, and is passed on to consumers through FPAs.
(viii) The overall cost of electricity generation from renewables (hydel, wind and solar) comprises primarily of the capacity charge, as the fuel charge is negligible (if any).



(3)A sharp rise in net hydel profits

Net hydel profits (NHP), which the federal government is legally bound to pay to provinces against the bulk hydropower generation, have posted a sharp rise in recent years.8Up till 2015, this amount was capped at Rs 6.0 billion per annum, and that too only for the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province. However, following the successful negotiations between the federal and KP governments and their concurrence by the Council of Common Interest (CCI), Nepraallowed the uncapping of these profits from FY16 onward.

Specifically, Wapda was allowed to charge from CPPA the net hydel profit of Rs 18.7 billion for FY16 against the purchase of hydro-electric power –this amount was to be included in the capacity charge.9In 2016, the CCI approved NHP payment of Rs 83 billion to the government of Punjab for Ghazi-Barotha Hydropower Project on the grounds similar to those in case of the KP government.In 2017, Nepraissued a detailed ruling on the subject and determinedthe hydel levies (including NHP, Irsa charges and water use charge) for all the provinces for the year FY18. For KP and Punjab, the regulator also allowed 5 percent indexation every year for the computation of NHP. Moreover, it also determined the values of NHP arrears for the years FY19 and FY20
 

Will_Bite

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
Investors in the Jhimpir Wind Corridor are alarmed as their projects have now suffered an unprecedented shutdown of six consecutive days since the federal government halted all offtake from their wind farms.

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“We had been seeing depressed offtake for almost two months now,” a leading investor in the project who did not wish to be identified by name tells Dawn. He says they saw between zero and 10MW evacuated on certain days over the last few months.

“But now the situation has turned alarming since we have seen six days with no offtake. Our turbines are standing idle while the government tells us that there is not enough power demand in the country.”

The Jhimpir Wind Corridor has total installed capacity of 980MW. Three plants in Gharo, adjacent to Jhimpir but closer to the coastline, are seeing continuing offtake because the K-Electric is continuing its purchases of renewable energy. All those that sell to the Central Power Purchasing Agency (CPPA) have been curtailed to zero, says Danish Iqbal, chairman Pakistan Wind Energy Association that represents investors’ interests in the corridor.

Meanwhile, another investor says the government is continuing to buy power from coal and regasified liquefied natural gas plants, and laments that these are pollution intensive options as well as reliant on imported fuels. Power ministry officials, for their part, have told the investors that thermal plants are superior options because they are closer to load centres in Punjab and a safer option for system stability.



Renewable power plants have no capacity payments in their Power Purchase Agreements, so curtailment of power evacuation for them means no revenue. “We already have the circular debt as a problem that we are dealing with, now we don’t even have enough to invoice the government to meet our upcoming debt service payments, which were predicated on power offtake,” one investor tells Dawn.

The plants do not factor on any merit order list since they are commissioned on a “must-run” basis, which means so long as they have power due to availability of wind, they will generate and sell to the government. But ministry officials are telling the investors that other plants, such as hydro and nuclear that are currently contributing close to 5,500MW out of total demand of 8,500MW in the country are also on “must-run” basis and curtailment there is physically not possible.

The association has met with government representatives from the ministry, the CPPA (the market operator for power), and the National Transmission and Despatch Company. The last contact was on Wednesday, but the curtailment continued unabated.

“Our financial situation is now very, very precarious” one investor says. Dawn spoke with a number of parties who have stakes in the corridor and all of them preferred to stay in the background.

“The majority of the projects in the corridor involve foreign investors with foreign lending as well. Our counterparts abroad are also worried now about the financial viability of their investments. Almost 70 per cent of our annual power generation takes place in the summer months, if this sort of a situation was to arise in those months it would spell our doom.”

Confidence in the government commitments to ensure offtake from renewable projects that come without capacity payments has been impacted as a result of this prolonged curtailment.

“Prime Minister has put up his vision to bring 30pc of power generation through renewable by 2030 but if you have these expensive base load plants on must run basis on imported RLNG and coal, they will never allow renewables to gain space in the grid,” says Danish Iqbal.

Power Minister Omar Ayub could not be reached for comments despite several attempts.


Published in Dawn, December 8th, 2019


You can thank Benazir and NS for this fiasco. Benazir's IPP contracts dont expire for another 6 years. Nawaz played a similar game in his own way. We are contractually bound to pay these plants, regardless of production. So why not get them to produce?