What’s keeping Pakistan in the dark?
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And power outages across the country have gone down drastically over the past few years.
Clearly, .
However,
After peaking in 2006, per capita electricity consumption failed to grow for almost a decade, remaining only one-fifth the average for other middle-income countries in 2014.
Fittingly, my new report
The study sheds new light on the overall societal costs — not merely the fiscal costs as in previous research — of subsidies, blackouts and other distortions in the power sector.
To that end, my team and I surveyed Pakistan's entire supply chain from upstream fuel supply to electricity generation, transmission and distribution, and eventually, down to consumers.
Put simply, the numbers we found are dire.
Problems begin upstream, where gas underpricing encourages waste and reduces incentives for gas production and exploration.
And with no recent significant gas discoveries, higher gas usage has widened the gap between growing demand and low domestic supply.
On top of that, the volume of gas lost before reaching consumers reached 14.3 percent in fiscal year 2015. By comparison, this number is about 1 to 2 percent in advanced economies.
Poor transmission contributed to 29 percent of the electricity shortfall in fiscal year 2015, while weak infrastructure, faulty metering and theft cause the loss of almost a fifth of generated electricity.
Electricity underpricing and failure to collect electricity bills have triggered a vicious “circular debt” problem, leading to power outages.
A lack of grid electricity also leads to greater use of kerosene lamps that cause indoor air pollution and its associated respiratory infections and tuberculosis risks.
Lack of access to reliable electricity also adversely impact children’s study time at night, women’s labor force participation, and gender equality.

As such,
Power sector reforms that restore market pricing and improve efficiency will complement traditional investments to increase power supply and expand access to reliable electricity.
However, in the absence of other reforms, too narrow a focus on liberalizing energy prices may be inadequate and, given the current inefficiencies in the sector, would lead to excessively high electricity costs, putting added stress on the poor and most vulnerable.
Rather, increasing efficiency should be the main priority, together with a gradual increase in energy prices and targeted assistance to mitigate the impact on consumers.
Addressing institutional distortions would yield huge efficiency gains. For example, allocating gas based on transparent market rules rather than administrative orders would promote a more productive use of fuel, and providing adequate incentives from adopting competition and regulations that links tariff with operating efficiency would improve the performance of utilities.
If well designed, these reforms will directly benefit all Pakistanis, especially the poorest, by increasing access, improving reliability and reducing cost emissions across Pakistan.
Why not make use of Solar energy?
Well, Pakistani people don't value to natural resources.
I am Karachi Pakistan resident my area North Nazimabad in Karachi ,there is big issue huge amount of electricity utility bills who never pay lower and middle class people thats why people choose using ilegal way of electric please provide lower budget electric in Karachi.