Pakistan mulls over 60 percent cut in solar buyback tariffs to save $15 billion in 10 years

Pakistan mulls over 60 percent cut in solar buyback tariffs to save $15 billion in 10 years
Technicians walk between solar panels at the Interloop industrial park, in Faisalabad, Pakistan April 8, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 15 July 2025
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Pakistan mulls over 60 percent cut in solar buyback tariffs to save $15 billion in 10 years

Pakistan mulls over 60 percent cut in solar buyback tariffs to save $15 billion in 10 years
  • Pakistan currently buys back solar-generated electricity from domestic, commercial and industrial producers at Rs27 per kilowatt hour
  • Authorities to present revised policy ‘within a month’ as global energy think-tank ranks solar as Pakistan’s largest power source in 2025

KARACHI: Pakistan’s government plans to more than halve the buyback tariffs for net-metered solar power to save Rs4.3 trillion ($15.1 billion) over the next ten years, according to people privy to the matter.

Authorities at Pakistan’s energy ministry are working on a new solar policy that looks to change the current net-metering regime under which the cash-strapped government is buying back solar-generated electricity from domestic, commercial and industrial producers at Rs27 per kilowatt hour (kWh).

The buyback rates for large scale grid-connected solar plants like Quaid-e-Azam Solar Power (Pvt.) Limited, Pakistan’s first 100-megawatt solar utility set up by Punjab government, ranges between Rs9 and Rs11.

“The government is proposing to remove this anomaly and offer almost a uniform buyback rate for net-metered solar power in line with global standard practice,” said a Pakistani energy ministry official who is privy to the policymaking discussions but cannot share them with media.

He said officials at the ministry’s power division will present a revised solar policy to the federal cabinet “within a month,” proposing to reduce the buyback price for net-metered solar power by more than 60 percent to Rs10 per kWh.

The government plans to link the buyback rates with the national base tariff.

“The government is encouraging these domestic and other distributed solar producers and has allocated a quantum for them in the IGCEP (Indicative Generation Capacity Expansion Plan),” the official said.

“What this new net-metering policy will define is the question that at what rate the government should buy power from these distributed producers. We are working this out.”

The move would help the government save Rs4.3 trillion ($15.1 billion) in the decade to come, he added.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government is currently trying to revive Pakistan’s debt-ridden economy by introducing energy and economic reforms, backed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that approved a $7 billion loan for the South Asian nation in Sept., last year.

Promoting renewable energy sources like solar and wind has been part of the government’s plan to avoid costly oil imports that shrank five percent to $15 billion from July 2024 till May 2025, according to latest official figures.

The South Asian country has boosted solar electricity generation by over three times the global average so far this year, fueled by a more than fivefold rise in solar capacity imports since 2022, Reuters reported last month, citing data from global energy think tank Ember.

The combination of rapidly rising capacity and generation has propelled solar power from Pakistan’s fifth-largest electricity source in 2023 to its largest in 2025, Reuters said.

However, the country still relies heavily on fossil fuels and generates 56 percent electricity from thermal, 24.4 percent from hydel, 8 percent from nuclear and 12.2 percent from renewable energy sources.

According to Pakistan’s latest economic survey, the nation’s total installed electricity generation capacity stood at 46,605 megawatts from July 2024 till March 2025, showing 2 percent increase from 45,888 megawatts during the same period in the previous year.

“The increase can be attributed with the installed capacity of 2,813 MW from net-metering,” the survey said.

Shankar Talreja, head of research at Karachi-based brokerage firm Topline Securities, said Pakistan had been spending billions of dollars on the import of solar panels from China, thus pushing the country’s inflation-hit consumers from grid-based energy to solar photovoltaic plants many of them have now installed at their rooftops to ensure smooth and cheaper supply of electricity.

“The benefit of net-metering was quite attractive, [so] people started installing solar at their rooftops and they were also selling excess electricity to government at a price of over Rs20 per kwh,” Talreja said.

“Pakistan imports over $2 billion of solar [panels] every year and it was increasing at a higher rate, resulting in further reduction in utilization of grid energy.”

Pakistan has so far imported solar panels of 48,000 megawatts capacity, mostly from China, of which, the country is generating close to 6,000 megawatts power due to low efficiency (up to 21 percent) of these panels, according to officials.

“People are installing as many solar plants as possible and selling their surplus power to the government at a higher rate,” the energy ministry official said, adding the government is also considering 8,500 megawatts power generation quota for the distributed net-metering solar electricity that comes from domestic, agriculture, commercial and industrial producers.

“The buyback rate the power division is proposing stands equivalent to the tariff we are using to buy power from large-scale solar plants,” he said, adding that even K-Electric, Pakistan’s largest private utility that powers the country’s commercial capital of Karachi, had agreed to sell its solar power to the government at as much as Rs10 per kilowatt.

Last month, K-Electric signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with China’s Huawei Digital Power Pakistan to strategically collaborate for 300 MWh battery energy storage systems and electric vehicles charging infrastructure to accelerate Pakistan’s smart energy transition.

The off-grid solar solution was one of the major reasons for 4 percent decrease in Pakistan’s total electricity consumption that dropped to 80,111 gigawatt hours from July 2024 till March 2025, according to the economic survey.

Talreja said the government, sensing the costly nature of net-metering, has started discouraging and insisting people to stay on the national grid, and proposed to slash and link the buyback tariff with national base tariff, i.e. 33 percent.

“The government is trying its best to increase share of renewables in overall energy mix, however, its implementation gets tougher due to idle capacity of expensive thermal assets,” the economist said.


China’s Challenge Fashion to set up $100 million Special Economic Zone in Pakistan — PM

China’s Challenge Fashion to set up $100 million Special Economic Zone in Pakistan — PM
Updated 24 sec ago
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China’s Challenge Fashion to set up $100 million Special Economic Zone in Pakistan — PM

China’s Challenge Fashion to set up $100 million Special Economic Zone in Pakistan — PM
  • Prime minister welcomes new Chinese investment in textiles, pledges full support
  • Project is expected to generate $400 million in exports over five years

KARACHI: China’s Challenge Fashion Group will establish a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in Pakistan with planned investments of $100 million over five years, expected to generate $400 million in exports, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s office said on Friday.

The development comes as Islamabad seeks to draw more Chinese investment into manufacturing and textiles under the industrial arm of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a multi-billion-dollar flagship of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative.

China is Pakistan’s largest trading partner, with bilateral trade exceeding $25 billion in recent years, and Chinese companies have already invested heavily in power, transport, infrastructure, and telecoms projects across the country.

““We welcome the establishment of a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) by Challenge Group in Pakistan,” Sharif told a visiting delegation led by Challenge Fashion Chairman Huwang Weiguo. 

“Through this SEZ, there will be assistance in technology transfer, skill development and sustainable industrial growth.”

Sharif instructed officials to provide every possible facility to the company and emphasized Pakistan’s resolve to promote the industrial component of CPEC.

Since 2014, Challenge Fashion has invested $17 million in Pakistan and is now scaling up with a modern textile industry. The Prime Minister’s Office said Sharif also inaugurated the new SEZ after the meeting.

Textiles remain the backbone of Pakistan’s economy, accounting for more than 60 percent of exports and employing nearly 40 percent of the industrial workforce.

The sector has faced challenges in recent years due to energy shortages, high costs and slowing global demand, but policymakers hope new investment and technology transfer from China will help boost competitiveness.


Dubai’s Burj Khalifa turns white and green to mark Pakistan Independence Day

Dubai’s Burj Khalifa turns white and green to mark Pakistan Independence Day
Updated 24 min 3 sec ago
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Dubai’s Burj Khalifa turns white and green to mark Pakistan Independence Day

Dubai’s Burj Khalifa turns white and green to mark Pakistan Independence Day
  • The UAE is Pakistan’s third-largest trading partner and home to over 1.6 million Pakistani expats
  • Pakistan achieved independence on Aug. 14, 1947, after the British partitioned the Sub-continent

ISLAMABAD: Dubai’s iconic Burj Khalifa lit up with Pakistan’s national flag on Thursday evening as the South Asian country marked its 79th Independence Day.

Pakistan achieved independence from British colonial rule on Aug. 14, 1947, after the British partitioned the Sub-continent into two independent dominions, Muslim Pakistan and Hindu-majority India.

On Thursday, the Pakistani embassy in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) shared on X a video of the world’s tallest skyscraper turning green and white.

“Dubai’s iconic Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, illuminated with the Pakistani flag on 14 August 2025 to mark Pakistan’s Independence Day,” the embassy wrote on X.

The UAE is Pakistan’s third-largest trading partner after China and the US. The Gulf state is also Pakistan’s second-largest source of foreign remittances, after Saudi Arabia, with over 1.6 million Pakistani expatriates living and working there.

Separately, Pakistan’s Consulate General in Dubai also hosted a flag-hoisting today to mark the 78th anniversary of Pakistan’s independence, with a large number of Pakistani community members attending the event.

Pakistan’s Consul General Hussain Muhammad warmly welcomed the community members and urged them to continue playing a constructive role in the development of both the UAE and Pakistan, according to the consulate.

Earlier this week, thousands of people attended Pakistan’s Independence Day celebrations at the Dubai Exhibition Center.

The event, titled ‘Emirates Loves Pakistan,’ was organized in collaboration with the Pakistan Association Dubai (PAD) and supported by Dubai Police, and featured a colorful mix of music, dance, art, cuisine and community spirit.


PM calls for fast-tracking Islamabad IT park as Pakistan eyes $30 billion exports

PM calls for fast-tracking Islamabad IT park as Pakistan eyes $30 billion exports
Updated 15 August 2025
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PM calls for fast-tracking Islamabad IT park as Pakistan eyes $30 billion exports

PM calls for fast-tracking Islamabad IT park as Pakistan eyes $30 billion exports
  • The 720,000-square feet IT park was previously scheduled to be inaugurated on Aug. 14
  • The facility will include incubation center, labs, offices, Tier III data center and auditorium

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Thursday asked authorities to fast-track the completion of an information technology (IT) park in the federal capital of Islamabad, Sharif’s office said on Thursday, amid Pakistan’s efforts to boost its IT exports to $30 billion.

The Pakistani Ministry of IT and Telecommunications, in collaboration with the Pakistan Software Export Board (PSEB), had earlier announced the inauguration of the IT park on this Independence Day, Aug. 14.

The 720,000-square feet facility will comprise offices, incubation center, business support center, research and development (R&D) laboratories, a Tier III data center that offers a high level of availability and redundancy and an auditorium.

The prime minister expressed his displeasure over the slow pace of construction on the project and gave directions to authorities for speedy completion of the facility, according to his office.

“The provision of world-class facilities must be ensured in the project,” he was quoted as saying.” All those responsible should intensify their efforts to complete this project.”

The IT Park aims to create jobs for youth, boost economic growth, enhance global IT competitiveness, and bridge the digital divide, according to officials.

IT is a priority sector for Pakistan, which has been seeking new markets, particularly in the Gulf region, for tech firms and startups, and looking to attract greater foreign investment. The sector generated $3.8 billion in export revenue during the last fiscal year, marking a 19 percent year-on-year increase, according to the IT ministry.

Earlier this month, Sharif directed authorities to draw up a roadmap to gradually raise Pakistan’s IT exports to $30 billion, urging concrete annual targets and reforms to accelerate digital growth.

“A complete digital ecosystem and infrastructure is being introduced to take Pakistan’s IT exports to $30 billion,” the prime minister said at a meeting in Islamabad on Aug. 8.

“We are taking priority measures to align the economy with modern requirements through digitization.”


Nearly 40 killed as cloudburst, floods and landslides wreak havoc in Pakistan’s north

Nearly 40 killed as cloudburst, floods and landslides wreak havoc in Pakistan’s north
Updated 55 min 45 sec ago
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Nearly 40 killed as cloudburst, floods and landslides wreak havoc in Pakistan’s north

Nearly 40 killed as cloudburst, floods and landslides wreak havoc in Pakistan’s north
  • Cloudburst ravages remote village in Bajaur’s Salarzai tehsil, with 16 dead and several missing
  • Eight people were killed after flash floods hit Gilgit-Baltistan, damaged homes and infrastructure

KHAPLU/ISLAMABAD: Nearly 40 people were killed as a cloudburst, floods and landslides caused widespread destruction in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province and the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region, authorities said on Friday.

A flash flood swept through the remote Jabarai village in KP’s Bajaur, a restive district that borders Afghanistan, following a cloudburst late on Thursday night, according to Amjad Khan, the KP Rescue 1122’s district emergency officer.

The raging currents swept away dozens of people, with authorities searching for survivors.

“Rescuers with the help of locals have so far retrieved 16 bodies and rescued three injured people from the debris and floodwaters,” Khan told Arab News.

“The injured were given first aid on-site before being shifted to a nearby hospital.”

In the Battagram district, flash floods killed at least 10 people, while 18 were missing, according to Rescue 1122. Another five people were killed and four injured after roof of a house collapsed in Lower Dir.

Rescue operations were underway in affected areas, while a provincial government helicopter has been dispatched for Bajaur on the instructions of Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur, according a statement issued from the CM’s office.

“Timely rescue operation must be ensured to search for missing persons,” CM Gandapur was quoted as saying by his office.

In the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region, at least eight people were killed and several others injured after heavy rains triggered flash floods and landslides in several areas, officials said on Thursday.

“Eight people were killed in different incidents in GB on Thursday. Six people were buried under the debris of flood in Khalti village of Ghizer.

Of them, four bodies have been recovered and two are still missing, while another five people were injured,” Tahir Shah, a senior official at GB Rescue 1122 service told Arab News.

“Similarly, a 70-year-old man and a 13-year-old girl were killed in Ishkoman Valley, Ghizer. Another two people were also killed in Diamer district of Gilgit-Baltistan. The deceased were brother and sister.”

The floods, which carried with them boulders, mud and tree trunks, caused extensive damage to houses, crops, orchards and infrastructure in the region that is home to thousands of glaciers and five of the world’s 14 peaks above 8,000 meters, according to officials.

“Many roads are blocked, homes and other infrastructure have been damaged,” GB government spokesman Faizullah Faraq told Arab News.

“Many villages near the rivers have been vacated and resident moved to safe places.”

The Karakoram Highway, which connects Pakistan with China, has been blocked in Upper Hunza, while landslides have blocked Baltistan Highway, Babusar Road, Deosai Road and Skardu-Sadpara Road at multiple locations, according to Faraq.

“The government is utilizing all resources to restore roads,” he said. “Rescue 1122, GBDMA and local administration are active for the rescue and recovery of missing persons, and emergency has been declared in affected areas.”

GB Home Minister Shams Lone has instructed all district administrations to issue emergency alerts and prioritize the safety of lives and property, according to a GB government statement. The minister asked for timely evacuation of at-risk populations, with advance notices to residents.

“We advise all travelers and tourists en route to Gilgit-Baltistan to immediately halt their journey,” the GBDMA said in its advisory. “Travelers are advised to exercise extreme caution and wait for further updates.”

Pakistan, which produces less than 1 percent of the world’s greenhouse gases, has suffered disproportionately from climate-induced extreme weather patterns in recent years. The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) put the nationwide monsoon death toll at 313 on Thursday, which is likely to exceed with fresh fatalities taken into account.

In 2022, torrential monsoon rains killed more than 1,700 people and caused damages over $30 billion to the nation.


Germany weighs fate of Afghans in Pakistan as deportations intensify

Germany weighs fate of Afghans in Pakistan as deportations intensify
Updated 15 August 2025
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Germany weighs fate of Afghans in Pakistan as deportations intensify

Germany weighs fate of Afghans in Pakistan as deportations intensify
  • Germany’s admission program for at-risk Afghans is now under review following February’s migration-focused election
  • The new center-right coalition intends to close the scheme, which had already been suspended pending an ongoing review

BERLIN: The German government is reviewing whether Afghans stranded in Pakistan while awaiting resettlement in Germany will indeed be allowed to go there, its interior minister said on Thursday, as Islamabad intensifies deportations of Afghans.

Pakistan has begun to deport documented Afghan refugees ahead of its September 1 deadline for them to leave, according to the United Nations, a step that could see more than 1 million Afghans expelled from the country.

Among them are more than 2,000 Afghans awaiting visas to travel to Germany under an admission program designed to evacuate people considered to be at risk under Taliban rule in Pakistan’s neighbor Afghanistan.

A source familiar with the matter said detentions of Afghans for deportation over the border have continued, even during Pakistan’s Independence Day holiday on Thursday.

“People with German admission approval are being brought to the Torkham border (between Pakistan and Afghanistan) as we speak,” the source told Reuters."

German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt confirmed that some Afghans in Germany’s resettlement scheme “have recently drawn the attention of Pakistani authorities,” and Berlin was in discussions with Islamabad over their status.

“We are reviewing whether these people can actually leave for Germany. Whether this actually happens depends on the outcome of the review process,” Dobrindt told journalists.

Germany’s admission program for at-risk Afghans — launched in October 2022 by the center-left government in office at the time — is now under review following February’s migration-focused election won by conservatives.

The new center-right coalition intends to close the scheme, which had already been suspended pending an ongoing review.

Since May 2021, Germany has admitted about 36,500 Afghans seen as vulnerable to Taliban crackdowns, but the conservative-led government says humanitarian migration now exceeds the country’s integration capacity.

On Wednesday, Germany’s foreign ministry said it was in close contact with Pakistani authorities and using established emergency mechanisms to prevent deportations of Afghans.

The interior ministry said it could not provide a timeline to determine the future of the admission program but expects decisions soon. It did not say whether the increase in deportations from Pakistan would hasten a decision.