Pakistan suffers major power outage after grid failure
ISLAMABAD — Pakistan suffered nationwide power outages on Monday morning attributable to a “major breakdown” of the nationwide grid, the power ministry mentioned, with factories, hospitals and faculties impacted in all its major cities.
The breakdown started at 7:34 am (0234 GMT) when a voltage fluctuation within the grid occurred between the cities of Jamshoro and Dadu in southern Sindh province, power minister Khurrum Dastagir.
“There was a fluctuation in voltage and the systems were shut down one by one. This is not a major crisis,” Mr. Dastagir informed Geo TV information channel.
Outages have been reported within the southern port metropolis of Karachi, the capital Islamabad, the jap metropolis of Lahore and Peshawar within the north.
Mohammad Asim, a spokesman for Peshawar’s Girl Studying Hospital, the most important hospital in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, mentioned backup turbines have been used to offer uninterrupted electrical energy for the emergency ward, intensive care items, and laboratories.
The power ministry issued an announcement saying that work was ongoing to revive the system, and the minister mentioned that electrical energy had been restored in some elements of the nation.
Pakistan has sufficient power put in capability to fulfill the demand, particularly in winter, when it largely has a surplus. However the nation lacks assets to run its oil and gas-powered vegetation and the sector is closely in debt, and insufficient funding in infrastructure and power traces has resulted within the Nationwide Grid struggling frequent breakdowns. — Reuters