⚡ 1. Power generation vs demand gap
Sometimes the country simply doesn’t produce enough electricity for everyone—especially in summer when ACs and fans run nonstop.
- Demand shoots up massively in heatwaves
- Power plants can’t always keep up
💸 2. Circular debt crisis
A big root cause.
- Electricity bills aren’t fully recovered (theft + unpaid bills)
- Distribution companies don’t pay power producers
- Producers can’t buy fuel → generation drops
This cycle is called “circular debt” and it’s a major issue in Pakistan’s energy sector.
🔌 3. Transmission & distribution losses
Even when electricity is generated, a lot is lost:
- Old wires and poor infrastructure
- Illegal connections (“kunda system”)
- Technical losses
So power exists—but doesn’t reach users properly.
🏭 4. Fuel shortages & expensive energy
Many plants run on imported fuel (oil, LNG).
- If dollar prices rise → fuel becomes expensive
- Government reduces production to control costs
- Result: load shedding
🏗️ 5. Outdated infrastructure
Some power plants and grid systems are old and inefficient.
- Frequent breakdowns
- Maintenance issues
- Slow upgrades
☀️ 6. Seasonal factors
Load shedding gets worse in summer:
- Higher demand
- Hydropower may fluctuate depending on water levels
🏢 7. Area-based load shedding
In many cities (like parts of Rawalpindi):
- Areas with high theft or low bill recovery face longer outages
- “Good” areas get less load shedding
⚖️ 8. Government policy & management issues
Delays in reforms, pricing issues, and political decisions also affect supply.