Lesco tells Nepra shifting transmission lines impossible

Published March 9, 2022
A view of houses on Lahore's Bund Road near Gulshan-i-Ravi constructed under power transmission lines. — White Star / Murtaza Ali
A view of houses on Lahore's Bund Road near Gulshan-i-Ravi constructed under power transmission lines. — White Star / Murtaza Ali

LAHORE: The Lahore Electric Supply Company (Lesco) has told the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (Nepra) that removal of high voltage power transmission lines from the ‘existing right of way’ and shifting them to other places is not possible since it costs huge money to do so.

The company said this in a reply to Nepra after a complainant approached it, demanding removal of the lines crossing over his and others’ houses in a locality of Lahore.

“It is absolutely impossible for us to remove the lines passing through their own right of way unlawfully occupied allegedly by the people at grade (on ground). How can we do this since it is our right of way and not the people occupying this unlawfully?” Lesco Chief Engineer Zafar Iqbal told Dawn on Tuesday.

“We have told this to the regulator. However, we can do this if the complainants pledge to bear expenses which they cannot afford definitely,” he added.

Lesco had earlier issued notices to 650 people last week for ‘unlawfully’ constructing houses and the buildings for various uses under the high voltage lines emanating from the grid stations for power distribution to consumers.

The company issued notices to the people in the areas of Lahore, Kasur, Sheikhupura, Nankana and Okara, keeping in view various fatal/non-fatal incidents of electrocution being reported frequently.

The notices issued by the company are not limited to construction of houses/buildings under the lines but to those as well who had encroached upon the land either by extending their buildings’ shades close to wires passing on the front or taking their structures’ height to a level close to the wires.

According to official sources, the land grabbers managed to sell the land, acquired by the government in the past for laying transmission lines, to the people after carving out plots on the right of way that is supposed to be left empty because of passing of the lines/wires.

Published in Dawn, March 9th, 2022

Opinion

Editorial

PM spurned
Updated 28 Jun, 2024

PM spurned

The PM must ensure PTI is allowed to function just like any other political party while the latter must not set rigid conditions.
Gaza’s journalists
28 Jun, 2024

Gaza’s journalists

Israel does not want other voices to be heard, and is adamant on spinning its blood-soaked campaign in Gaza as a ‘just war’.
Chinese industries
28 Jun, 2024

Chinese industries

PRIME MINISTER Shehbaz Sharif appears to be pushing the rusty bureaucratic machinery hard to turn nearly three dozen...
Positive feelers
Updated 27 Jun, 2024

Positive feelers

New Delhi’s negotiators should adopt a less rigid stance if they are at all serious about regional peace.
Polio problem
27 Jun, 2024

Polio problem

SIX cases in six months. The tally for the entire last year equalled in half the time. Pakistan’s efforts towards...
Battle against heat
27 Jun, 2024

Battle against heat

DO the rulers have what it takes to protect citizens from sizzling temperatures? Apathetic and myopic, they have...