Meeting taking place at the time when power shortfall has crossed 6,000 megawatts.    
Officials at the president’s office and in the power distribution  companies confirmed on Sunday that the meeting would take place though  they were unsure about the possible decisions likely to be taken.
“At the moment, the whole power sector looks to be in an utter chaos…  nobody seems sure how to improve it. The only certain thing is that  this summer is going to be the worst,” said one official familiar with  the matter.
The meeting is taking place at the time when the gap between the  electricity generation and demand has surged to 6,000 MWs, a level which  had never been reached during the past three years that the crisis has  been most acute.
The long painful hours of power cuts are frustrating household  consumers and damaging an already suffering economy. The government  fears the situation may trigger political unrest if no corrective  measures are taken now.
“This is the backdrop for the meeting. It is do or die, now or never  for the government… if it lets things happen the way they are  (happening), it is going to cost it very highly,” said another official  who is close to President Zardari.
Senior officials from the Pakistan Electric Power Company (Pepco),  independent power producers, the Water and Power Development Authority  (Wapda), Pakistan State Oil (PSO) and power distribution companies are  likely to attend the meeting.
Also present would be Water and Power Minister Syed Naveed Qamar and senior officials from the petroleum ministry.
The shortfall is largely attributed to the government’s inability to pay what is known as circular debt in the power sector that has reportedly jumped to Rs400 billion, though there is no certain mechanism for its accounting.
“That is the biggest evil. It is a very simple mathematics. We have  close to 19,000 MWs installed generation capacity and producing less  than 10,000. It is because IPPs don’t get money to buy fuel. We will  have to resolve the circular debt,” the official added.
It was because of the spiralling circular debt that the state-run PSO stopped supplying fuel to generation companies recently.
There were, however, little hopes that any significant decision could  be taken at the meeting because the government was already facing a  financial crunch and the international fuel prices were climbing up like  never in the past due to political unrest in oil-producing nations in  the Gulf, according to officials.
“We must not expect much from the meeting… the limitations are so  severe. Only thing we all should get ready for is a tough summer,”  another official remarked.



 



 
 
 
 






 
 
 
