Federal govt concedes provinces’ right to produce power:
ISLAMABAD: In return for greater control of the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority under an amended Nepra law, the federal government conceded on Tuesday that the right to generate electricity, transmit and distribute it be devolved to the provinces.

Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad
Ali Shah told journalists after the meeting that under Article 157 of
the Constitution, the provinces had the powers to set up electricity
generating units, transmission lines and distribution systems and to
determine tariff for distribution of power within their territory, but
this could not be “translated in the Nepra act”.
He said
he had told the meeting that the provinces should be granted this right
while the federal government was amending the act. “Our demand was that
the Constitution be followed in the matter... Now the [federal]
minister has agreed to this. I am thankful to the other provinces and
the minister as they all have agreed,” he said.
Amendments to Nepra law planned
Mr Shah said the objective of the meeting was that all the
stakeholders should join hands to overcome the power crisis. The
situation had grown worse in Sindh where in certain areas people were
enduring power cuts of up to 20 hours.
He said he had already taken up in writing the issue with Mr Asif and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
Another
important area for his province, Mr Shah said, was the tariff for
bagasse-based and other captive power plants which could be utilised to
reduce loadshedding by four to five hours. But because “we do not have
the said powers, we cannot utilise them”.
The power
minister said that amendments to the Nepra act had been finalised after
incorporating viewpoints of the provinces. Ending loadshedding should be
seen as a joint effort because it was affecting the entire country.
Hopefully the problem would be solved by the end of the year, he said.
In
response to a question, Mr Asif said the people who stole electricity
were present in all the provinces and that he had never suggested that
such people lived in any one province only.
According to
an official, the minister directed the authorities concerned to
formulate tariff for bagasse-based projects within a month and ensure
that the Hyderabad Electric Supply Company facilitated purchase of
electricity from such plants. He, however, said Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s
chief minister did not agree that powers should be given to the federal
government to impose surcharges under proposed changes in the Nepra
law. Such powers should be exercised by the Council for Common
Interests.
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