Power cuts return as shortfall touches 7,000MW:
ISLAMABAD: Electricity consumers across the country had a bad day on Sunday, when the gap between the demand and supply kept fluctuating between 5,000 and 7,000 megawatts, resulting in extensive power cuts of seven to 10 hours.

The shortfall reared its head as
temperatures rose to 47 and 48 degrees Celsius in parts of Sindh and
south Punjab, while major load centres such as Lahore, Karachi and the
areas around Rawalpindi and Islamabad witnessed highs of 43, 37 and 36
degrees Celsius, respectively.
A ministry spokesperson
said that Sunday was the first day in nearly a fortnight when scheduled
load management was carried out, as distribution companies had been
providing maximum supply to consumers over the past two weeks thanks to
comparatively lower temperatures.
Soaring temperatures take demand above 20,000MW
The electricity shortfall on Sunday was generally higher
than in the early days of May 2013, when it ranged between 4,000 and
6,000MW. But demand at the time was also lower by 2,000-3,000MW.
The
spokesperson said load-shedding varied under different distribution
companies, but the average remained within six to eight hours, excluding
low-recovery and high-loss areas where longer power cuts were applied
by the respective companies.
“There was not a single
megawatt of forced load-shedding,” he said, adding that the distribution
companies kept on announcing higher schedules for the supply gap where
needed.
An official explained that after setting aside
the seven per cent transmission and transformation losses and 19pc
distribution loss, the total energy reaching the consumers based on
official numbers would be around 11,600MW.
This meant the
indicative shortfall went beyond 8,500MW, or about 12 hours of
load-shedding on average, based on a thumb rule of a 700MW gap resulting
in one hour of load-shedding.
It was a rare day for
power sector engineers, since it started with a gap of almost 6,000MW,
as generation stood at 13,800MW at 9am against a demand of 19,600MW.
This
was mainly due to the closure of five old power plants at Guddu due to
the non-availability of natural gas, leaving the 747MW project to
generate about 680MW.
Two units of Hubco and one of
Nandipur were on outage, while one unit each at the newly-inducted
Bhikki and Haveli Bahadur Shah plants kept going in and out of the
system because of incomplete testing issues.
An official
said there was almost 1,000MW of unaccounted draw of generation by some
distribution companies against their allocated shares, due to
non-metering and communication gaps.
Reports from various
parts of the country suggested six to eight hours of load-shedding in
major urban centres and up to 18 hours in the rural areas.
Sources
say the hydropower projects contributed a maximum of 4,280MW, while
public-sector generation companies produced 2,877MW and independent
power producers (IPPs) almost 8,300mw.
They said the
hydropower stations were generating about 3,400MW in the morning, but
reasonable water quantities were retained to maximise output to 4,280MW
for peak demand. Production from public sector thermal plants and IPPs
was also ramped up by 150MW and 600MW between the morning and peak
evening time because of financial and fuel constraints.
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