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Pakistan says curbing power sector debt, seeks energy investors

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ISLAMABADPakistan expects debt being built up within its troubled power sector to level off this year and start falling, its power minister told Reuters, outlining measures to shore up confidence and attract foreign investors.

Pakistan has long been bedevilled by electricity shortages, with power outages crippling industries and economic growth, as well as stoking voter anger in the mainly Muslim nation of 208 million people.

Vast Chinese investment has helped drastically reduce power outages, lifting economic growth, but years of mismanagement has led to accumulated power sector payment arrears, or “circular debt”, rising to Rs1.4 trillion ($10.1 billion).

Independent power producers angry with late government payments have warned of a crisis, while economists fear rising circular debt will further widen Pakistan’s yawning fiscal deficit, a key part of ongoing bailout talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Power Minister Omar Ayub Khan, appointed soon after premier Imran Khan took office in August, said the decision to hike electricity tariffs, which kicked in at the start of January, will stop the sharp rise in power debt.

“All of a sudden, after January 1, you have a levelling off of circular debt, because the new tariff has kicked in,” Khan, who is the grandson of Pakistan’s first military ruler, Ayub Khan, told Reuters in Islamabad on Tuesday.

Built into the tariff is an extra cost that will allow the government to pay off arrears from the previous year, which in 2019 should result in Rs226 billion reduction of circular debt, Khan added. Within three to four years, the government expects to claw back Rs470-500 billion.

The government will also recover an extra Rs43 billion annually in circular debt parked in state-owned Power Holding Private Limited (PHPL), which holds about Rs600 billion of the Rs1.4 trillion debt. “That will take longer,” Khan said.

He said cash from a planned Rs200 billion Islamic bond will be used to retire old expensive debt, and pay independent producers to ease their financial crunch.

To prevent circular debt rising again, the government plans to crack down on endemic power theft and modernise distribution companies and a creaking transmission network struggling to cope.

A new energy policy is also due to be announced soon, with plans to re-orient Pakistan’s energy mix.

Pakistan wants to use more indigenous resources such as hydel and hike the renewables portion of the mix to 20pc by 2025, and to 30pc by 2030.

Khan estimates Pakistan will need to double generation capacity to 55,000 megawatts by 2030, and is seeking investors to a nation where electricity demand is fast rising but about 25pc of the population is yet to be connected to the grid.

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