Let the market decide
With an IMF (International Monetary Fund) determined to punish past misdemeanours and a government unwilling to embrace meaningful reform, Pakistan’s gas sector is as good as finished and will take industry down with it.
For over three decades, the government actively promoted industrial captive power generation, yet as energy sector mismanagement has resulted in surplus power capacity and escalating tariffs, captive power producers (CPPs) have been made the scapegoat.
As the power sector crisis deepened, CPPs were blamed. Under the 2024 Stand-By Arrangement (SBA), the government proposed eliminating CPPs’ gas usage and forcing them onto the national grid to address stranded power capacity.
However, this policy—developed without adequate analysis—risks destabilizing both the gas and industrial sectors, with broader economic repercussions. After months of uncertainty regarding gas supply for captive power, the government has opted not to cut off supply but has instead hiked the captive gas tariff to Rs 3,500/MMBtu plus an additional “grid transition levy” to force industrial energy demand to the grid.
Energy pricing in Pakistan lacks any coherent market-driven logic. Power and gas tariffs are set based on arbitrary calculations that balance the government’s books—even then to the extend possible—rather than reflecting economic realities or ensuring efficient resource allocation. The grid transition levy is the latest in a series of such ill-conceived interventions.
Its stated goal is to align the cost of gas-fired captive generation with the B3 grid tariff, removing any cost advantage for captive power. Yet even the Ordinance through which it has been implemented is unclear about the mechanism with which to achieve this. It first directs authorities to calculate the levy by comparing industrial B3 tariffs with captive power costs only to contradict itself by mandating automatic rate hikes—5 percent immediately, increasing to 20 percent by August 2026.
These conflicting approaches expose the policy’s lack of foresight. If the intent is to eliminate the cost advantage of captive power, then the appropriate mechanism would be a benchmark tariff applied across the board rather than a levy, given that captive consumers can currently avail gas through the utilities at Rs 3,500/MMBtu or through third-party access at mutually negotiated rates.
Given the variation in effective prices faced by consumers, for the levy to achieve its objective it needs to be tailored to........
© Business Recorder
