ISLAMABAD: Minister of State for Water and Power Abid Sher Ali declared that the government will not grant any extension to the 650 megawatt supply agreement with K-Electric. However, if it happens so, new condition will be added to it.
The agreement is set to be expired on Jan 26.
Talking the media after inauguration of 132-kilovolt grid station of the Islamabad Electric Supply Company in F-16 sector, the state minister declared that the government would not extend the existing power purchase agreement with K-Electric as the prime minister had called for a review of the arrangement, adding that the centre was in consultations with the Sindh government in this regard.
He informed that Minister of Water and Power Khawaja Muhammad Asif would give a policy statement in this regard in the National Assembly.
“The K-Electric failed to honour the promise of increased power generation,” Ali regretted, adding that the company did not protect public interest. “We have to take care of the interest of consumers not that of K-Electric,” he deckared.
He pointed out that if the government went for a fresh agreement, then it would feature new conditions. K-Electric owed Rs100 billion to different government institutions and organisations, he said.
Regarding a stay order got by K-Electric for power purchase, Ali said the government would soon approach the Supreme Court to get the order vacated.
The Ministry of Water and Power and the Sindh government were at loggerheads over the power purchase agreement with K-Electric, which would expire on January 26. The ministry is opposed to any extension while the province insists on continuing supplies to Karachi in the larger public interest.
A K-Electric spokesman said the transmission of 650MW from the national grid to Karachi was not an issue restricted to the company but concerned the port city, the government, millions of consumers and thousands of factories.
“While the validity of the agreement is expiring on January 26, it is not written anywhere that the agreement can’t be renewed,” he said.
“K-Electric has added 1,010MW since Abraaj Capital took over in 2009. During these five years, demand has crossed 3,000MW from the initial 2,000MW.”
The company’s installed capacity is 2,300MW and receives around 650MW from the National Transmission and Dispatch Company to meet the growing demand. The federal government is a 25% shareholder in K-Electric. “This city is not just the responsibility of a private company. The government has to support the country’s only privatised utility. No one can deny the turnaround that we have achieved.”
Meanwhile, Sindh CM Qaim Ali Shah wrote to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, fearing that withdrawal of power supply to K-Electric would lead to a massive problems due to increase in outages.
The fallout will also be felt in the shape of lost industrial output, higher consumer tariff, he warned.