Khyber Pakhtunkhwa gets licence for transmission, grid company; Chitral has 3,000 megawatts power generation potential
PESHAWAR: The National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (Nepra) has granted a licence to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa for setting up a company to lay power transmission lines and put up grid stations to supply electricity produced by units located across the province.
Adviser to the chief minister for energy and power Himayatullah Khan told Dawn that the Nepra had approved the province’s application for the issuance of licence for the transmission and grid company formed by the province lately.
The provincial cabinet had approved in May last year the formation of the KP Transmission and Grid Systems Company (KPT&GSC).
The adviser said the company’s establishment was the constitutional right of the province.
He said following the cabinet’s approval, the province had registered a company with the Security and Exchange Commission of Pakistan and applied for a licence with Nepra.
Mr Himayatullah said after hearing the viewpoints of all stakeholders, the power regulator issued a licence for the establishment of the company.
KPT&GSC chief executive officer Maqsood Anwar Khan told Dawn that it was a milestone for the province.
He said the company would set up its own transmission lines and grid stations to evacuate electricity generated from its own mega power projects in different parts of the province.
Mr Maqsood said the company would have three to four corridors to evacuate electricity from but its main corridors would be Chitral and Swat corridors.
Mr Maqsood said that Chitral corridor has power generation potential of about 3,000 megawatts while Swat 1,000 megawatts. He said that power from Chitral corridor would be evacuated to Chakdarra grid station in Lower Dir district through a 500kv power transmission line while from Swat corridor through a 220kv line after the company set up its own transmission and grid system.
He said that once evacuating power to Chakaddra, the company can provide this electricity to Peshawar, Dera Ismail Khan, Swat or other parts of the country. He said that some of the province projects would start operations coming few years; however, National Transmission and Dispatch Company (NTDC) going by indicative generation capacity expansion plan (IGCEP) 2047 to evacuate power created a gap of 10-12 years between both sides, which necessitated the setting up the province’s own company.
He said even many of the province’s projects were included as the candidate instead of committed one and since a huge amount of money was at stakes in electricity projects, therefore, setting up one own company carried a huge importance for the province.
Mr Maqsood said the provincial company had its own advantages which made that easier for it to setup its own power transmission lines.
“The company being a provincial entity had added advantage of knowing the local custom and would also have the support of local administrations all over the province while setting up its lines and grid stations,” he said.
Regarding the financial cost of the setting up the company, he said that they were working out its financial cost.
Last month, the federal entities, including NTDC and Central Power Purchasing Authority, had opposed KP’s application for its transmission company licence.
The CPPA had said the existing laws allow only one power system operator in the country at a time and that was already in place running the national grid in the form of the NTDC. On its part, the NDTC also opposed the grant of the licence in question to the provincial company.
However, in its submission of the Nepra, the province rejected the federal entities’ objections earlier in the month.
“The NTDC agreed to our assertion before the Nepra,” Mr Maqsood said.
Published in Dawn, February 27th, 2021
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