Compiled from The World Bank’s, World Development Indicators Report, 2012
Not all hydro-electricity plants are attached to water reservoirs. Hussain tells me of the terrific success of the Ghazi-Barotha project, just a few kilometres south of Tarbela, producing 1,450 megawatts of electricity and built at a quarter of Tarbela’s cost (adjusted for inflation). It is a run- of-the-river project in which water rushes at a great speed through a diversion tunnel to run the power turbine set up at its end, before coming back into the river. Ghazi-Barotha involved minimal resettlement of people and has created no irrigation or provincial water sharing disputes — all huge problems in the construction of other hydropower projects. But run-of-the-river sites are harder to find; they often need an upstream reservoir to begin with.
Wapda has proposals for setting up projects which can produce 60,000 megawatts of hydroelectricity — from sites on the Indus, Swat, Kunhar and Chitral rivers. But they are going to take billions of dollars in investment and long construction times. They are not as politically expedient as thermal power projects, which can be functional in three years.
Take, for instance, the Neelum-Jhelum project. It was commissioned in 2008 and is still not complete. Located in Muzaffarabad district in Azad Jammu and Kashmir, it is being delayed by a complex set of reasons, one of them being Pakistan’s challenge in international courts to the Kishanganga Hydropower Project in Indian-administered Kashmir. The Indian project involves diversion of water from the Neelum river to another tributary of the Jhelum river, causing a 27 per cent water deficit for the Neelum-Jhelum project.
Similarly, Diamer-Bhasha Dam, where construction was to begin in 2011, is now being advertised as part of Wapda’s 2025 Vision Plan, all but confirming that the project will take at least another decade to complete. Delays have already increased its estimated cost from 11.2 billion dollars to 14 billion dollars.
After drawn-out resettlement deals for the people that this project will potentially displace, it is now mired in an equally drawn-out argument over royalties. Both Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Gilgit Baltistan are bickering vociferously over the ownership of the land where the powerhouse for the project is to be located since it is that location which determines who gets royalties from power generation.
The World Bank, a creditor for the project together with the Asian Development Bank, says Diamer-Bhasha Dam will also require a No-Objection Certificate from India. That is because most of it is to be situated in Gilgit-Baltistan which, according to the United Nations resolutions, is part of the state of Jammu and Kashmir that remains disputed between India and Pakistan.
Big water projects can be intrusive and give back little to the community they intrude on. The people of Ghazi, despite being wedged between two megaprojects, experience severe power outages. The 5,000 megawatts produced around them go directly to the national grid and only a tiny part of them comes back.
This is also a problem with the coal-based Pakistan Power Park in Gadani, a coastal settlement in Balochistan, for which money is currently being arranged through various investors. While the location of the 6,600 megawatts project – consisting of 10 powerhouses of 660 megawatts each – is suitable for reducing the cost of transporting the imported coal, the power it will generate is going to go largely to Punjab. As the Sindh government pointed out earlier this year in an official letter, the pollution caused by the project is going to badly hit the coastal settlements and Karachi, which is only a few kilometres away.
The muddle of regional disputes and long construction times required for hydroelectricity projects is what mainly led to the ready acceptance of the IPP model. This is also a reason why the Private Power Policy initiated in 1994 was such a vague paper. Weary of more delays, it did not specify the type of technology, fuel or location for the IPPs which, therefore, vary wildly in terms of generation costs and output capacity. The government also promised to purchase electricity generated for the next 30 years with sovereign guarantees on payments — this means the government will pay to the producers in case NTDC is unable to.
Some Wapda officials say the other purpose of the vague policy was to facilitate commissions and kickbacks in issuing commercial licences for the IPPs. Licenses were issued to anyone who applied for them — even textile mill owners became power producers.
Incidentally, Wapda was not made a stakeholder in the 1994 power policy. Among other things, this meant that Wapda’s thermal power generation costs began exceeding those of the IPPs due to a dearth of investment.
The Jamshoro Power Company Limited (JPCL) can be found on the Indus Highway in Sindh, a short distance from the city of Jamshoro. The driveway that leads to the administrative buildings is expansive enough to be mistaken for a runway. The buildings themselves are quite large, with four towering boiler chimneys providing a suitable backdrop.
It is only when you get closer that the signs of age and disrepair belie the spectacle from afar. Once inside, the obligatory portraits of Jinnah remove any lingering doubts that this is a government company. It is not easy getting in. Like everybody else in the power sector, the company is weary of bad press. (In my electricity travels, I am told by one public relations officer that he is not allowed to talk to the press, another asks me not to tell anyone he gave me contacts for senior engineers; in fact, he implores me to forget we ever met. At the JPCL, they don’t even have a public relations officer. The head of the human resources and administrative department, Jamil Ahmed Nizamani, is left to deal with the media.) Media scrutiny is even more of an anathema to thermal plants where generation is sporadic, prone to stoppages when payments pile up and oil companies refuse to supply fuel.
In my electricity travels, I am told by one public relations officer that he is not allowed to talk to the press, another asks me not to tell anyone he gave me contacts for senior engineers; in fact, he implores me to forget we ever met.
Nizamani is a veteran of the thermal industry. Before JPCL, he served at another generation company in Guddu. Then, following some of his colleagues, he went abroad for a while, to Saudi Arabia and Japan, both countries where thermal power is huge.
He comes from a village called Matli. The villagers see the engineering university in nearby Jamshoro as a gateway to a better life. Many of Nizamani’s friends became Wapda engineers — almost all of them are now working abroad. While most may have traded in their government pay scale for more zeroes on their monthly cheques, some have been exported on government recommendations as well.
The constant outflow of experienced personnel obviously leaves vacuums, perhaps not at the lower level where the influx of newer engineers is still adequate, but at the higher rungs of the power sector ladder.