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Industries close due to IPPs’ exorbitant electricity costs: KATI

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Korangi’s businesses have been driven to ruin, according to President KATI Johar Ali Qandhari, by IPPs, high electricity costs, and onerous taxes.

According to him, 60,000 people are unemployed and 350 industries have shuttered or scaled back.

He emphasized that if the IPP contracts aren’t reviewed, things will get worse.

The public was outraged, as were industrialists, about costly power and capacity payments to IPPs. Lately, a number of trade associations and chambers of commerce nationwide have bemoaned the effects of exorbitant electricity prices.

In a social media announcement on Sunday, former caretaker minister Gohar Ejaz claimed that the IPPs had received payments totaling Rs. 1.95 trillion. The former minister claimed, “The government is paying a power plant 140 billion rupees on a 15 percent load factor.” He continued, “Another plant is being paid 120 billion rupees over a 17 percent load factor, and the third power plant is being paid 100 billion on a 22 percent load factor.”

Gohar Ejaz remarked, “These are only three power plants, receiving 370 billion rupees.”

He revealed that the IPPs have provided substantial capacity quantities without producing any electricity.

“Capacity payments” is a phrase in all these contracts that permits inflated earnings, according to the former minister. He continued, “This clause results in the IPPs receiving sporadically distributed capacity payments.”

In addition, he had asked that the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) represent all parties involved.

Additionally, he insisted that the agreements with the IPPs be changed to a “take and pay” arrangement.

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In interbank trade, the Pakistani rupee beats the US dollar.

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In the international exchange market, the US dollar has continued to weaken in relation to the Pakistani rupee.

The dollar fell to Rs278.10 from Rs278.17 at the beginning of interbank trading, according to currency dealers, a seven paisa loss.

In the meantime, there was a lot of turbulence in the stock market, but it recovered and moved into the positive zone. The KSE-100 index recovered momentum and reached 116,000 points after soaring 1,300 points.

Both currency and stock market swings, according to analysts, are a reflection of ongoing market adjustments and economic uncertainty.

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Phase II of CPEC: China-Pakistan Partnership Enters a New Era

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The cornerstone of economic cooperation between the two brothers and all-weather friends is still the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, the initiative’s flagship project.

In contrast to reports of a slowdown, recent events indicate a renewed vigour and strategic emphasis on pushing the second phase of CPEC, known as CPEC Phase-2, according to the Ministry of Planning, Development, and Special Initiatives.

According to the statement, this crucial stage seeks to reshape the foundation of bilateral ties via increased cooperation, cutting-edge technology transfer, and revolutionary socioeconomic initiatives.

Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal is leading Pakistan’s participation in a number of high-profile gatherings in China, such as the 3rd Forum on China-Indian Ocean Region Development Cooperation in Kunming and the High-Level Seminar on CPEC-2 in Beijing.

His involvement demonstrates Pakistan’s commitment to reviving CPEC, resolving outstanding concerns, and developing a strong phase-2 roadmap that considers both countries’ long-term prosperity.

At the core of these interactions is China’s steadfast determination to turn CPEC into a strategic alliance that promotes development, progress, and connectivity.

Instead of being marginalised, CPEC is developing into a multifaceted framework with five main thematic corridors: the Opening-Up/Regional Connectivity Corridor, the Innovation Corridor, the Green Corridor, the Growth Corridor, and the Livelihood-Enhancing Corridor.

With the help of projects like these, the two countries will fortify their partnership, and CPEC phase-2 will become a model of global economic integration and collaboration that benefits not just China and Pakistan but the entire region.

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The inflation rate in Pakistan dropped to its lowest level.

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On December 2, core inflation as determined by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) significantly slowed, falling to 4.9% in November 2024 from 7.2 percent in October 2024.

The CPI-based inflation rate for the same month last year (November 2023) was 29.2%, according to PBS data.

Compared to a 1.2% gain in the prior month, it increased by 0.5% month over month in November 2024.

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