a new claim. Apparently the government has discovered that the fuel treatment plant is of a lower capacity than its power generation capacity so the project can’t be fully functional. Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif who had issued multiple advertisements calling the project a success has now called for a NAB inquiry into the project while continuing to claim that the requisite machinery has been in Karachi customs for the last three years. The PML-N has a strange aggressive-defensive approach to the project. Some of its members continue to claim massive corruption in the project but have continued to defend the project publicly. The Ministry of Water and Power has now issued a letter to the contractor asking for explanations but the real explanation is needed from the government. Faulty machinery, escalating costs and a number of false starts certainly suggest serious foul play which is unlikely to be determined by the prime minister’s inquiry. The Nandipur Power Project is another example of the spectacular failure of the private power sector to deliver its promises under the current political environment. With the regulator clueless, private producers know it is in their benefit to make as many mistakes as possible. The government will just pay for them. Ultimately, though, it is the people who are paying in the shape of less power and extended periods of loadshedding.
Govt's hawkish elements need to recognise that their rigidity could worsen the current political impasse
These sentences mark first phase of legal consequences for those involved
Deadlock finally broken on Thursday , with India, Pakistan and ICC agreeing to hybrid model
No one enjoys giving up portion of their income and so revenue collection measures incur people’s resentment
FO rightly rebukes these sanctions, terming them “biased” and warning of their dangerous implications for regional...
Senator says that Pakistan should focus on centralised climate authorities to local leadership at provincial level