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Islamabad (AFP) – A massive power breakdown across Pakistan continued after night fell on Monday, affecting most of the country's 220 million residents, including in the mega cities of Karachi and Lahore,
Pakistan's national power system is a complex and delicate web where problems can quickly cascade.
The breakdown was caused by a fault in the national grid at around 7:30 am (0230 GMT), plunging much of the country into darkness.
"We hope that the electricity will be restored throughout the country by tonight," Energy Minister Khurram Dastagir Khan said in a video statement.
The cut was caused by a variation in frequency on the national grid as power of a generation units were turned on early in the morning.
The units had been temporarily switched off at night to save fuel, Khan earlier told the media.
Localised power cuts are common in Pakistan and hospitals, factories and government institutions are often kept running by private generators. The machines are, however, beyond the means of most citizens and small businesses.
In parts of northern Pakistan, temperatures were due to drop below freezing on Monday night with supplies of natural gas -- the most common heating method -- also unreliable due to load-shedding.
The economy is already hobbled by rampant inflation, a falling rupee, and severely low forex reserves, with the power cut piling extra pressure on small businesses.
In the garrison city of Rawalpindi, homeware trader Muhammad Iftikhar Sheikh, 71, said he was unable to demonstrate electronic products to browsing customers.
"The customers never buy without testing first," he said. "All of us are sitting idle."
Schools mostly continued either in the dark or using battery-powered lighting.
A shop owner in the southern port city Karachi, where temperatures were higher, told AFP he feared his entire dairy stock would spoil without refrigeration.
Thirty-nine-year-old printer Khurrum Khan said orders were piling up because of the blackout.
Unreliable power is "a permanent curse which our governments have failed to overcome", Khan complained.
Repair work was underway, with limited power restored in some parts of the country, including the capital Islamabad.
Karachi, with a population of more than 15 million, and Lahore, with a population of more than 10 million, both remained largely without power as darkness fell.
A similar breakdown in January 2021 affected the entire country, after a fault occurred in southern Pakistan, tripping the national transmission system.
© 2023 AFP
Pakistan hit by nationwide power outage
Students attend a class at a government high secondary school during a nationwide power outage in Rawalpindi on January 23, 2023. A massive power breakdown in Pakistan on January 23 affected most of the country's more than 220 million people, including in the mega cities of Karachi and Lahore. (AFP/Aamir Qureshi)
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A massive power breakdown in Pakistan on Monday affected most of the country's more than 220 million people, including in the mega cities of Karachi and Lahore. Local outages are common across Pakistan, and the national power system is a complex and delicate web where problems can quickly cascade. The hours-long outage, the second in two years, was caused by a fault in the national grid at around 7:30 am (0230 GMT). "According to initial reports, the system frequency dropped at the national grid in the morning which led to a massive breakdown," the ministry of energy tweeted. Repair work was underway, with limited power restored in parts of the capital and the northwestern city of Peshawar. The port city of Karachi, with a population of more than 15 million, and Lahore, with a population of more than 10 million, remained without power. "We hardly managed to come to school as there was no electricity at home," said 25-year-old Karachi teacher Vareesha Nadeem. "Here in classes we are using battery-powered lights but they'll run out soon. Power outages have just become a part of our lives as they happen so often." A shop owner in the megacity told AFP he feared his entire dairy stock would spoil without refrigeration, and 39-year-old printer Khurrum Khan said orders were piling up because of the blackout. Unreliable power is "a permanent curse which our governments have failed to overcome," Khan complained. In the garrison city of Rawalpindi, neighbouring Islamabad, most shops were struggling without power. Homeware trader Muhammad Iftikhar Sheikh, 71, said he was unable to demonstrate electronic products to browsing customers. "The customers never buy without testing first," he said. "All of us are sitting idle." A similar breakdown in January 2021 plunged the entire country into darkness after a fault occurred in southern Pakistan, tripping the national transmission system. Pakistan has long been hit by energy shortages because of a combination of factors including a poor economy, mismanagement and a lack of storage facilities. Hospitals are mostly backed up with generators and schools use gas to heat their classrooms. Load shedding this winter has impacted domestic households and industries including textile manufacturing, one of the largest industries in Pakistan, with some plants temporarily closed.
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