After failing to secure funds for the multibillion dollar Diamer Bhasha Dam from multilateral donors – allegedly due to Indian lobbying – the government has now decided to seek a major portion of the project’s financing from China.
“China may not be able to provide our entire financing needs: however, it can contribute a major portion of funds needed for the Diamer Bhasha dam,” Ministry of Water and Power’s Special Secretary Himayatullah Khan informed a parliamentary panel here on Friday.
The National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Water and Power which met with Syed Ghulam Mustafa Shah in the chair to discuss the project’s financing was also treated to a shocking disclosure: amid periodic delays, the cost of constructing the Diamer Bhasha dam has now shot up to $14.4 billion, against earlier projections of $11.5 billion.
The special secretary also pointed out that the country will have to depend on expensive power from thermal generation plants due to a decline in hydroelectric power generation in the coming month because of canal closures.
“The decline in current power generation is mainly because of a decline in hydel generation, which has dropped to 30% of the total energy mix, against 70% a few years ago,” he said. He noted that power generation cost using furnace oil is Rs17 per unit, hydel Rs1.5 per unit, while gas-based generation costs Rs4 per unit.
“After December 20, the country will be left with no option but to go for expensive power generation through furnace oil and diesel,” Khan said; adding that power generation through diesel will cost a staggering Rs22-27 per unit to the government. He also reminded the panel that power consumers are paying Rs8.88 per unit, whereas Rs3.50 per unit in subsidy is borne by the government.
Committee member Chaudhry Abid Sher Ali alleged that 650 megawatts of power was being exported from Punjab to Karachi, despite a severe energy shortfall in the industrial city of Faisalabad. He also raised the issue of delays in the Nandipur Power Project, which he said had additionally resulted in the shortage of power for industrial consumers in Faisalabad. In response, the special secretary acknowledged the delay, but pointed out that the matter is currently pending in the Supreme Court of Pakistan.
Other members of the committee, including Pir Aslam Bodla and Bilal Yasin, demanded lifting of the ban on collecting power bills in instalments in order to facilitate the poor, who they claimed had “lost their capacity” to pay “huge power bills”. The special secretary agreed to consider this proposal, but said that instalments would be allowed in exceptional cases only, and that current outstanding bills would need to be paid within the due date.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 1st, 2012.
COMMENTS (12)
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@DevilHunterX: @Shahid Butt: to abdussamad "How long Pakistan will continue to beg other countries ?" @abdussamad: to Shahid Butt " So I ask you how long will the US continue to beg other countries?" Ipso facto Pakistan = US of A since both are in the same hole!
$14.4 billion cost, while our total reserves right now are $8.8 billion while in Jan we have to pay more then $2.5billion to IMF
@Shahid Butt. Comparing the USA deficit to Pakistan is inappropriate -- the USA finances it's deficit through treasury bonds which are in such demand that the USA pays a nominal rate of interest. Nobody wants Pakistani bonds which were considered "junk bonds" yrs ago when your economy was better than today. Your best bet is to raise taxes or add a surcharge to your utility bills (assuming you can get people to pay them).
please correct above that punjab is not exporting 650 MW electricity to karachi. it is NTDC and it belongs to GOP.
@abdussamad: Boy you sure answered his question?
@Shahid Butt:
You are hardly one to talk. China is the USA's largest creditor. The US government regularly sends people like treasury secretary Geithner over to China to beg the Chinese to keep buying US government bonds. So I ask you how long will the US continue to beg other countries?
missile & armament programs never hit snags even though it is costing millions.
@abdussamad: Here in USA, federal govt is running deficit more than a trillion dollars per yr for the last four yrs. ( one trillion is equal to one thousand Billion ). Back in 1960's US govt floated Bonds in Billions of dollars and built high way system all over the country. That system is now back bone of the transportation system.Those bonds were paid back over the next 30-40yrs by the Toll tax revenue. To me this is a good example to follow. Again I am not a financial expert.If govt has to borrow money, it can borrow from its own citizens or borrow from big banks and from foreign countries with number of conditions.In this case electricity revenue can pay back the loan (bonds) over the next 30-40yrs.How long Pakistan will continue to beg other countries ?Any other financial expert to give any other opinion?
I am no financial expert but I have studied finance at IBA for 4-years;
and I can tell you this that when someone like Husain Dawood invests more than 1 Billion USD and doesn't get gas even though his company has sovereign guarantees (Engro Fertilizer case in point) then only a guy on crack will want to invest in Pakistan.
I also invest in the stock market; no sane investor will give money to this government.
Shahid Butt: The government is already borrowing heavily from local banks. In fact it is borrowing so heavily that the market keeps running out of liquidity. The central bank responds to this by printing money and injecting liquidity into the market. So the end result is that the government's heavy borrowing is inflationary and it crowds out the private sector. And you want the government to borrow even more from the local market?
Why Govt is not raising funds for this project locally in the form of multi years BONDS.These bonds can be sold thru the stock market. Can any financial expert comment on this topic?
Still people oppose Kalabagh Dam. The riswing costs of these delayed project could spell the doom of Pakistan.