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Pakistan’s political crisis has been an energy crisis, too

Successive governments have failed to back renewables, cutting the country off from the cheapest source of indigenous energy. The new prime minister could change all that.

April 18, 2022 / 10:35 IST
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Shehbaz Sharif (Image: Reuters)
Shehbaz Sharif (Image: Reuters)

The political crisis that pitched Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan from office wasn’t just about the failure of his anti-corruption agenda and mismanagement of an economy where inflation running at nearly 13 percent has driven months of opposition protests. It’s also, as with so many of Pakistan’s political crises, about energy and exchange rates.

For decades, heavy dependence on imported energy has constrained growth. To break out of its chronic pattern of stagnation, Pakistan needs more power for its industrial, household, and transport sectors. Whenever that has happened in the past, however, a rising bill for imported fossil fuels has prompted one of its periodic balance-of-payments crises. The International Monetary Fund bailout that’s widely expected within months would be Pakistan’s 19th since the early 1970s.

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The problem has been recognised for years. Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif planned to reduce the power sector’s dependence on imported gas and fuel oil with a fleet of nuclear and lignite coal plants. Khan, by contrast, cancelled some of those coal generators and pledged to more than double hydroelectric output to lift renewables to 60 percent of the generation mix.