power plays in pakistan

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    Power plays in PakistanBy Huma Imtiaz, April 21, 2010 Wednesday, April 21, 2010 - 3:11 PM Share

    To say Pakistan's power crisis is worsening on a daily basis is to say the least. With an electricity

    shortfall that is spiraling out of control and unannounced power cuts of up to 12 hours in many areas

    of the country, the government of Pakistan is trying to figure out how to pull the plug on Pakistan's

    energy crisis. Unfortunately for them, it will take more than a bit of effort.

    The problem with Pakistan's energy crisis is bad planning. Electricity consumption has increased

    over the years, but successive governments failed to plan for the future. As a result, Pakistan now

    needs a huge supply of electricity, and has very few power generation plants that can cope up with

    the demand. The current government has announced plans to set up power plants and build dams

    to help generate power, but building power plants afresh takes a lot of time -- and a lot of money,

    which this cash-strapped government will not be able to pay for on its own.

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    This afternoon, the Karachi Electric Supply Company, which supplies power to Pakistan's financial

    hub Karachi, cut offJinnah Postgraduate Medical Center's electricity supply. The Jinnah Hospital,

    as it is popularly known, is one of the largest public hospitals in the city, and caters to thousands of

    patients on a daily basis. KESC said it disconnected the electricity because the hospital owedmillions of rupees in unpaid bills. On the other hand, the hospital's administration said it had asked

    the Pakistani government for funds so they could pay the bills and would do so within two to three

    weeks. Yet KESC cut off the supply, affecting the lives of thousands of patients. The hospital's

    backup generator could only provide electricity to a few wards. It is a miracle that no one died. After

    repeated assurances regarding the bill payment, the electricity supply was restored after two and a

    half hours, yet there was every possible chance that a patient could've died in the ER, the operating

    room, or the ICU.

    On a personal note, at my home in Karachi I don't have electricity for up to four hours a day, every

    day. Imagine coming home in the blazing heat to realize there's no respite from the sun: the house is

    as hot as an oven, you can't work, finish household chores, watch TV or for that matter even get a

    glass of cold water.

    The situation is even worse in Punjab: hundreds of factories have been forced to close down, and

    protestors take to the streets almost daily to raise their voices against the situation, but to no avail.

    In the midst of the outages, provinces and cities trade allegations on the distribution of power

    resources, power companies (both state-run and private) accuse the other of not paying bills or

    blame consumers for stealing electricity and not paying bills, government institutions rack up millions

    in unpaid bills, and protests against the current status quo continue.

    Over the past two days, Prime Minister Gilani has been consulting with the Chief Ministers of all

    provinces, trying to find a way that they can reduce the electricity demand. The finalized proposal

    includes reducing the workweek to five days from six, ensuring markets are closed by evening and

    having weddings end by midnight. While these conditions may temporarily help ease the crisis,

    Pakistan needs power to survive. It's a thought that the U.S. administration has tried to help address.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced on a visit to Pakistan that the country would

    receive $125 million for electricity infrastructure. Washington's envoy to the region, Richard

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    Holbrooke, has raised the issue several times, even giving a collection of fiction containing a short

    story about an electrician to President Obama to read.

    Riots sparked across Pakistan last summer over the electricity crisis a situation that took days to

    quell.The government must implement not just the power-saving proposals but also look towards building

    power plants and tapping into alternative energy resources. If politicians do not take heed, the

    government will soon be forced to realize that more than the Taliban, more than suicide bombings,

    more than insurgencies, it is really the power crisis -- the product of years of bad planning at all

    levels of government -- that most threatens Pakistan's present and future.

    Huma Imtiaz works as a journalist in Pakistan.