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States of UAE

States of USA

Cities of Balochistan

Dams and river of country

CPEC

Arfa Karim

Why Bhutto was hanged

Capital of country

According to a National Electric Power Regulatory Authority’s


(Nepra) State of Industry Report 2015, “Pakistan has potential of
around 40,000 megawatts (MW) hydropower.”
Pakistan Metrological Department has reported recently
that the storage capacity has dropped by 35% due to the
silting element and absence of any new dams.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_sector_in_Pakistan

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nandipur_Power_Project
Cost of multan metro: 29 Billion

Cost of Rawalpindi metro: 16 Billion

Cost of Orange line: 50 Billion

Cost of Diameer bhasha Dam: 14 Billion S

Cost of Neelum Jehlum: 5 Billion Dollar

Cost of NandiPur : 30-60 Billion Dollar

Diameer Bhasha: Roller-compacted concrete (RCC) or rolled concrete (rollcrete)

special blend of concretethat has essentially the same ingredients as conventional concrete
but in different ratios, and increasingly with partial substitution of fly ash for Portland
cement.[2] RCC is a mix of cement/fly ash, water, sand, aggregate and common additives,
but contains much less water. The produced mix is drier and essentially has no slump. RCC
is placed in a manner similar to paving;

Mohmad Dam: concrete-faced rockfill (CFR) dam

“It is a drawback of the country that its power production is


dominated by thermal power plants running on oil and gas.(fossil
fuel)Pakistan is a country which is heavily dependent on import of
oil for its domestic energy requirement,
Oil-fired power is quite obviously a no-go for Punjab, as it is for
any other part of Pakistan, on account of its high cost of
production. Punjab already has nearly 7,000MW of installed
capacity for power plants that run both on oil and natural gas, and
the government does not run them largely due to the fact that it
would massively run up the subsidy bill.

Coal is an option
that has been presented as a possible solution to Punjab’s woes. Unfortunately for Punjab, the only
feasible way to transport coal is through rail, and the utter inability of Pakistan Railways to get anything
done is an inviolable assumption that one must make when analysing the Pakistani economy. So any
coal — whether it be imported or mined at Thar — cannot economically be transported to power plants
in Punjab.

That leaves only one option: natural gas. And here is where the
Sindh problem comes to the fore

Bhikki Gas Power Plant.sheikupura 1100MW


Shaiwal coal project 1300
Nandipur Power Project 425 MW Gujranwala 30-60 Billiom
Port Qasim 1300 in Karachi

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