Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Foreword
- The Contributors
- Introdution
- 1 Oil and Gas Pricing Policies in India
- 2 India's New Foreign Policy: The Journey from Moral Non-Alignment to the Nuclear Deal
- 3 Regional Integration in South Asia and Energy Cooperation: Opportunities and Challenges
- 4 Pakistan's Energy Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities
- 5 Energy Security and Geopolitics in South Asia: Historical Baggage, Global Powers, and Rational Choice
- 6 Energy Cooperation between India and Bangladesh: Economics and Geopolitics
- 7 Sino-Indian Energy Politics
- 8 Linkages in Urban and Energy Policies: An Analysis of China and India
- 9 Strategic Petroleum Reserves in China and India
- 10 New Partnerships in Energy in Asia between India, Japan, and Singapore
- 11 The Geopolitics of Energy in India: Implications for Southeast Asia
- Concluding Remarks: The Context for India's Energy Geopolitics
- Index
4 - Pakistan's Energy Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Foreword
- The Contributors
- Introdution
- 1 Oil and Gas Pricing Policies in India
- 2 India's New Foreign Policy: The Journey from Moral Non-Alignment to the Nuclear Deal
- 3 Regional Integration in South Asia and Energy Cooperation: Opportunities and Challenges
- 4 Pakistan's Energy Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities
- 5 Energy Security and Geopolitics in South Asia: Historical Baggage, Global Powers, and Rational Choice
- 6 Energy Cooperation between India and Bangladesh: Economics and Geopolitics
- 7 Sino-Indian Energy Politics
- 8 Linkages in Urban and Energy Policies: An Analysis of China and India
- 9 Strategic Petroleum Reserves in China and India
- 10 New Partnerships in Energy in Asia between India, Japan, and Singapore
- 11 The Geopolitics of Energy in India: Implications for Southeast Asia
- Concluding Remarks: The Context for India's Energy Geopolitics
- Index
Summary
Introduction
In the summer of 2007, Pakistan faced some of the worst power shortages in decades. Power shortages have been endemic in the country, but these shortages were largely due to a surge in electricity demand consistent with, and related to, economic growth. The government did indeed anticipate the shortage, but failed to increase the installed capacity of hydro and thermal power generation. Fuel imports for the power and transportation sector continued to increase, resulting in a large import bill and undermining Pakistan's balance of payments. Aside from this, the promise of bringing electricity and modern fuels to the large number of people living in the rural areas poses new challenges for the government.
Nevertheless, the good news is that the economy has been growing fast and all other macroeconomic indicators are showing healthy signs of improvement. Since 1991, Pakistan has gradually liberalized the economy. Successive governments have carried out a massive reform agenda leading to structural changes in the economy. The current regime took the agenda a step further through privatization and deregulation in the power and hydrocarbon sector. The sustainability of economic growth and the resultant social development will depend on ensuring an adequate and affordable supply of energy.
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL BACKDROP
Pakistan is one of the fastest growing economies in the world, growing at an average of seven per cent for the last five years (2003–07). All three sectors — agriculture, industry, and services — of the economy contribute to this growth at 15, 25, and 60 per cent respectively. Strong domestic demand continues to support equal growth in consumption (50 per cent) and investment (50 per cent). Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves reached US$16 billion and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) reached US$7 billion at the end of FY2006–07, having started off from a mere few hundred million at the start of this century.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Geopolitics of Energy in South Asia , pp. 83 - 93Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2008