ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s government said on Tuesday it would launch a public awareness drive on energy conservation and draw up a “comprehensive” plan to prevent nationwide power outages in the future after millions of people lost electricity for up to 24 hours earlier this week due to a breakdown in the national grid.
A power failure struck Pakistan on Monday morning after, as part of an energy saving move, electricity was turned off across the country during low usage hours overnight to conserve fuel but technicians were unable to boot up the system all at once after daybreak. The breakdown hit the entire country, from the financial capital of Karachi in the south to Peshawar city in the north.
In a Twitter post, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif regretted the inconvenience faced by people and announced an inquiry to determine the reasons behind the power breakdown. He also took up the issue in a cabinet meeting later on Tuesday.
“The federal cabinet ... ordered the formulation of a comprehensive strategy to prevent the recurrence of prolonged power outages in the future and to do away with the factors causing it,” the Associated Press of Pakistan state news agency reported after the meeting, adding that the PM had also approved a nationwide public awareness drive on the conservation of power, water, gas and other resources.
The participants of the cabinet meeting agreed that “behavioral changes would save billions of rupees in foreign exchange and reduce the electricity bills of individuals by 30 to 40 percent.”
While Pakistan has enough installed capacity to meet its demand, the South Asian country lacks adequate resources to run its oil- and gas-powered plants. The energy sector is also heavily in debt and cannot afford to invest in new infrastructure and power lines, which often result in transmission losses.
This was the second nationwide blackout in three months due to a frequency failure in a perennially troubled national grid, raising questions about infrastructural weakness and the urgent need for upgrades. Another massive blackout took place in January 2021 and was attributed at the time to a technical fault in the country’s power generation and distribution system.