To cover up this and other ghastly errors, the higher-ups seem to have wanted to give the operations and maintenance of the plant over to a foreign company and appear to have been willing to pay an exorbitant amount of public money for this. The result of all of this incompetence is that the government now has a $500 million, 525MW power plant that stands in the middle of a region that desperately needs electricity, but is absolutely unable to use it. The problem did not start with the Nawaz Administration, but it was firmly within its power to salvage the situation and be part of the solution to Punjab’s energy shortages. Instead, the administration failed. The Nandipur debacle is important not just because of the enormous waste of public money, nor because of the delays or incompetence of the staff involved. It is important because it is a scathing indictment of the management style of a government that seeks to concentrate power into the hands of a very small circle of close confidantes of the ruling party’s bosses and the small number of bureaucrats they trust.
A nation of 200 million people cannot be personally run by such a small circle of rulers. That they were unable to run a project in a policy area — energy — that has been identified as crucial to their party’s political future suggests that the Nawaz Administration had better shift course swiftly, or else face electoral oblivion. The tribal mentality that dominates the leadership of the PML-N needs to change. The PML-N’s top brass needs to learn to trust again, even if it has been twice betrayed in the past, and learn to value competence over loyalty, or else it will run the country and its economy into the ground, and along with it, the political future of the ruling party.
The prime minister won a massive electoral mandate on the promise that he would solve Pakistan’s energy crisis. While he has made some efforts in moving the country in that direction, there is a long way to go and he cannot afford to be distracted by the predictable disasters that come from a failure to delegate responsibility to the right people. We believe the prime minister is sincere in his desire to solve the problem. But he needs to realise that his own style of governance may stand in the way of his success.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 20th, 2015.
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