Islamabad Chamber
of Commerce & Industry (ICCI) strongly criticized the Government plan to
pass on another electricity liability on consumers to pay off the circular debt
of Rs.136billion.
Mr.Mehmood
Ahmed Waraich, Senior Vice President ICCI said that Government should not
pursue the policy of burdening the consumer further because this proposed plan shows
the fecklessness of the Government instead of tackling the problem of circular
debt by adopting an economic stimulus plan.
He said
that it is highly unjustified that the
government is now making consumers to pay for the debt it has accumulated which
would hit investments, manufacturing, exports, trade besides increasing
the incidence of electricity pilferage.
Mr.Waraich
was of the view that common man was already facing severe economic crisis
because of constant hike in inflation on everyday basis, thus passing on of
exorbitant electricity liability would make the lives of the people more
difficult.
He said that people in general and the industry in
particular, continue to suffer long blackouts despite the almost doubling of
the price of electricity in the last four years. ICCI Senior Vice President
said that the government in 2008, had promised to revamp the power sector and
to end electricity shortages. Since then, it had raised the price of
electricity by more than 85 percent to eliminate subsidies, but had failed to
implement reforms to make the power sector efficient.
Mr.Saeed Ahmed Bhatti, Vice President ICCI said that circular
debt has been caused by government entities like railway, PIA, Pakistan Steel
Mill etc, including the provincial and federal government departments not
paying their utility bills, resulting in the power companies being
cash-strapped and unable to pay for the fuel for their generation
plants. Therefore, Government should tackle the problem of circular debt
by plugging the holes which allow so much money to leak away instead of pass on
electricity liability on consumers to pay off the circular debt.
He
asserted that there was a need to evolve a new policy to attract private sector
investment in energy sector to overcome the gap between the demand for energy
and its supply.
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