By Ajmal Khan Yousafzai
ISLAMABAD: China continued its support constructing power transmission line in Pakistan inspire of COVID-19. Affected by the pandemic this year, the domestic economy has been sluggish, and every industry has been attacked at varying degrees. In spite of this, the construction of domestic power transmission and transformation projects has made significant progress with the support of Chinese enterprises in 2020.
According to the report, after two years of preparing and constructing, the Matiari to Lahore ±660kV HVDC Transmission Line Project was completed in November.
The project was expected to be completed in 2021, and its actual commissioning date is one year ahead of schedule.
Matiari to Lahore ±660kV HVDC Transmission Line Project was signed on 2018 May 14th and started constructing on December 1st of the same year.
The project, with a capacity of 4 megawatts and an annual capacity of about 35 billion kilowatt-hours, fills a technical gap in Pakistan’s HVDC sector and creates 5,000 – 7, 000 local jobs.
Besides the mega-project under CPEC frame, several crucial power transmission projects also have made progress.
In October this year, China XD Group signed the DHABEJI 220kV transmission line project contract with K-Electric Limited.
Under the project, a new overhead and buried cable line connecting the DHABEJI substations in Karachi will be built. The contract includes every step of construction such as design, survey, supply, civil engineering, construction, installation, and field testing.
On December 24, China Energy Engineering Corporation Limited (Energy China) signed the EPC contract for ADB-401A 500 kV double circuit power transmission Line project with NTDC.
The project is a 500 kV transmission line from SK Hydropower Station to Neelangjhelum, with a total length of about 75 km, using a double loop and four split mode.
The power transmission project delivering electricity from SK hydropower station will further alleviate Pakistan’s power shortage and boost local economic and social development.
Apart from the lack of generating capacity, poor transmission systems are also reckoned as a major factor of domestic power shortage.
Pakistan was hit by a massive power outage caused by a malfunction of electric transmission line on January 26, 2015, which is considered as one of the worst energy crises in Pakistan’s history, affecting the capital Islamabad as well as a number of towns and villages in the provinces.
As the construction of transmission system under CPEC, the domestic power shortage has been relieved in the past 5 years, and new signed projects will also support Pakistan to cope with the power shortage in the future, the report added.