Pakistan Bulletin
An up-to-date and informed analyses of key issues of Pakistan.
Inflated Electricity Bills in Pakistan: Understanding the Causes
March 2024
Pakistan’s current electricity cost crisis is an outcome of the inflated capacity charges obligations, pushed for by International Finance Institutions in the late ’90s.
High electricity prices push low income groups towards compromising their wellbeing and make downward adjustment to health, education, housing, and fuel.
In Pakistan, there are various slabs for power consumers with the two main categories i.e. protected and unprotected consumers. According to the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA), the electricity tariff starts from Rs.16.48 per unit for low consumption of power to over Rs.42.72 for consuming more than 700 units in a month. The aforementioned rates are the base tariff of the electricity in the country excluding the taxes and capacity payment charges, which consumers have to pay every month.
The base tariff was raised substantially in July 2023 on the conditions of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to secure the bailout package to shore up the foreign exchange reserves of the country, which dropped to a historically low level in 2022 and 2023.
According to the figures taken from the NEPRA website for energy mix, the share of hydel in the total energy mix dropped from 34% in 2016 to 28% in 2023. Whereas the shares of RLNG and coal (mainly imported) shot up to 17% and 16% in 2023 from 0.7% and 1% in 2016 respectively.
Experts believe that the energy mix also played its part in inflating the power bills, however its contribution is low compared to that of capacity payment. As observed by FRIm Ventures’ Amir, the share of imported coal and RLNG went up in the energy mix, however at the same time, the share of furnace oil dropped massively. In addition, the share of renewable sources also rose up in recent years compared to the past.
The base tariff - mostly reflecting capacity payments - was substantially raised in July 2023 in response to IMF conditionalities to secure the bailout package following a foreign exchange reserves crisis.
Tanveer Malik
Author
The writer is a journalist at The News.

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