70.6 F
Pakistan
Monday, April 20, 2026
HomeBusinessStrait of Hormuz closure: Pakistan faces LNG crunch as three cargoes stuck...

Strait of Hormuz closure: Pakistan faces LNG crunch as three cargoes stuck in Persian Gulf

At least three Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) cargoes destined for Pakistan are currently stranded in the Persian Gulf, according to Bloomberg’s vessel-tracking data. The South Asian country has gone more than a month without receiving any LNG shipments due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, raising the risk of increased power outages as temperatures begin to rise, said the report. Last week, Minister for Power Sardar Awais Ahmad Khan Leghari said that power load-shedding during peak hours will continue until the supply of LNG is restored, which is currently unavailable due to a force majeure declared by Qatar. Pakistan ramps up furnace oil use, delays nuclear maintenance amid LNG shortages The country is facing a shortfall ⁠of around 3, 400 megawatts due to reduced hydropower output, as rainfall and lower irrigation demand have ​limited water releases from reservoirs, Awais Leghari told a press conference. There has also been a sharp drop in ​LNG-based generation, prompting load management of up to 6–7 hours in some areas, Leghari added. Pakistan’s LNG-fired plants, with about 6, 000 MW capacity, are producing only around 500 MW due to gas shortages, while hydropower output has fallen to about 1, 600 ​MW, roughly half of last April’s level, he said. On the global front, the ceasefire in the Iran war, due to run until Tuesday, was in doubt after the U. S. seized an Iranian cargo ship and Tehran’s top military command vowed to retaliate. Iran ​rejected new peace talks with the U. S. , its state news agency reported on Sunday, hours after U. S. President Donald Trump said he was sending envoys ‌for ⁠talks in Pakistan and would launch new strikes on Iran unless it accepts his terms.

Read full story on Business Recorder

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -
Google search engine

Most Popular

Recent Comments