Electricity Crisis: Sanaullah says power supply to Gilgit Baltistan vital in freezing winter

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ISLAMABAD: Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Political Affairs Rana Sanaullah has said it is very important to Supply Electricity to the people of Gilgit-Baltistan in this freezing winter.

He was presiding over a meeting held to resolve Electricity crisis in Gilgit-Baltistan.The meeting was attended by Gilgit-Baltistan governor, chief minister and other senior officials.Rana Sanaullah said a meeting on Loadshedding in Gilgit-Baltistan has been called on the special directives of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.

He said the Gilgit-Baltistan government will reduce its expenditure on the pattern of the federal government and that funds will be released to Gilgit-Baltistan council.Gilgit-Baltistan chief minister Gulbar Khan said Electricity shortfall has increased due to reduced water flow.

He said supplying electricity through generators to the region’s affected areas from January to march is inevitable.

Meanwhile, hundreds of people blocked a highway on Tuesday in in protest against power outages lasting longer than 20 hours, as temperatures plunged to minus 15 degrees Celsius.

Routine load-shedding is widespread across fuel-deprived Pakistan, but residents of the mountainous, snow-covered regions in Gilgit-Baltistan endure prolonged blackouts. “We have been facing the worst kind of power cuts, we get only one or two hours of electricity during the whole day,” Baba Jan, a political activist who organised the protest, told AFP.

Around 1,000 people have joined the demonstration in the picturesque valley of Hunza since Friday, blocking a section of the 1,300-kilometre Karakoram Highway and preventing dozens of freight trucks from crossing into China. People in the region usually rely on wood to keep warm as both gas and fuel-operated generators are too expensive.

“People from all walks of life including the tourists are suffering in extremely cold weather due to the absence of electricity,” Zahoor Ali, another protest organiser told AFP. The highway is part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) in which China has invested billions of dollars, connecting the northern border to the southern coastal city of Gwadar.

“The Karakoram Highway at Ali Abad in Hunza is completely blocked for traffic… business between Pakistan and China is suspended for days owing to the blockade,” local trader Javaid Hussain said. “For the smooth running of business between Pakistan and China, the government should take steps to end the power crisis in the region.”

Pressure on the electricity grid increases during peak winter and summer seasons, leading to planned load-shedding as the government grapples with an energy supply crisis, exacerbated by political instability and economic stagnation.

Owing to its remoteness, Gilgit-Baltistan is not connected to the national grid and fails to generate enough power from dozens of hydro plants while thermal plants have proven costly.

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