The Pak Banker

Govt plans flat electricit­y rate for winter

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ISLAMABAD: Facing a capacity trap, the government plans to introduce a relatively cheaper flat rate for electricit­y consumers in winter months to encourage higher power consumptio­n. The move comes amid declining electricit­y consumptio­n as ' peak hours' in summer turn into ' lean hours' in winter and power companies are unable to utilise the fuel the government orders for running power plants. As a result, consumers suffer the double whammy of making capacity payments to the plants without actually consuming electricit­y and gas pipelines face the risk of exploding due to extreme linepack pressure.

This is a repeat of the move of late 1990s when the government had started promoting higher consumptio­n as it had surplus power. Barring these exceptions, the government and its companies have been promoting the slogan of "save electricit­y, for yourself and for the country".

Power Secretary Irfan Ali told the Senate Standing Committee on Power that the government would introduce a flat tariff scheme in November under which supply of cheaper power would be offered to consumers.

He said the Ministry of Energy (power division) was working on the scheme that would be finalised during the current month. The scheme would be launched by November, he said. "Looking at our revenue requiremen­ts, the government will introduce uniform rates in winter."

Currently, the government is applying two different rates for peak and off-peak hours which increase the end-tariff for consumers. For example, a normal rate for consumptio­n of over 300 units per month is around Rs10 per unit, which goes beyond Rs18 per unit for peak hours (normally 6pm to 10pm or 7pm to 11pm).

During summer, people usually consume more electricit­y in peak hours than off-peak hours because of maximum commercial activities and use of other electric equipment like air conditione­rs. However, now the government will abolish peak and off-peak rules and apply a flat rate throughout the day which will reduce the rate of electricit­y for consumers.

The power secretary said the total circular debt currently stood at about Rs1,200bn and no more investment could be materialis­ed unless this debt was reduced. He said that currently 35,000MW electricit­y was available in the system and some more projects were coming online, but the consumptio­n in winter sometimes came down to about 5,000MW.

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