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On 28 March 2002 the Federal Government of Pakistan established Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA), in pursuance of the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority Ordinance, 2002. The Natural Gas Regulatory Authority (NGRA) was subsumed by the OGRA, all properties and works done by the NGRA were transferred to and protected under the OGRA Ordinance.
Electricity in Pakistan is generated, transmitted and distributed by two vertically integrated public sector companies, first one being Water and Power Development Authority responsible for the production of hydroelectricity and its supply to the consumers by electricity distribution companies (DISCOS) under the Pakistan Electric Power Company (PEPCO) being the other integrated company.
Pak Gen. Power Mehmood Kot, Punjab 365 RFO 10 Fauji Kabirwala Kabirwala, Punjab 170 Gas 11 Hub Power: Hub, Balochistan 1,292 RFO 12 KAPCO: Kot Addu, Punjab: 1,600 Gas 13 Kohinoor Energy Ltd: Lahore, Punjab: 131 RFO 14 Rousch Power Sidhnai, Punjab 450 Gas 15 Saba Power Company Ltd: Sheikhupura, Punjab: 136 RFO 16 TNB Liberty Power Daharki, Sindh ...
Pages in category "Natural gas-fired power stations in Pakistan" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Gas Infrastructure Development Cess (GIDC) is a cess introduced by the government of Pakistan to for funding gas infrastructure projects. [1] [2] The cess was applied to industrial sectors such as fertilizers, CNG, and power plants, but not directly to the general public.
Natural gas production is at a relatively high level and remaining reserves are estimated to be about 885.3 billion cu m (1 January 2009 est.). Pakistan's gas fields are only expected to last for about another 20 years at the most due to heavy industrial usage. [10] [11] The Sui gas field is the biggest natural gas field in Pakistan.
In 2004, OGDCL was listed on the Karachi Stock Exchange, following an initial public offering at a strike price of PKR 32 per share. [11] On 4 May 2009, the government of Pakistan appointed a Citigroup-led consortium to advise the state-run Privatisation Commission on the sale of 10 to 15 percent (or 430 to 645 million shares) of the company ...
The share of Gas has decreased from 50% in 2005 to 24% in 2022, and oil, since 2015, from 35% to 27% in 2022, being largely replaced by Coal and LNG. As Pakistan intends to generate around 8,800 megawatts of nuclear power by 2030, its share is also increasing gradually.