ISLAMABAD: The government has notified an all-inclusive fixed and subsidised electricity rate of Rs19.99 per unit for five export sectors for nine months beginning Oct 1 to facilitate exporters to compete with regional peers.

All distribution companies including K-Electric “are advised to provide electricity at the rate of Rs19.99/kWh all-inclusive to the five export-oriented industries — textiles, leather, carpet, surgical and sports goods — from Oct 1 to June 30, 2023,” reads a notification issued by Power Division of the Ministry of Energy (PDME) on Thursday.

The notification said the Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) of the Cabinet had approved on Oct 10 a summary of the Ministry of Commerce seeking regionally competitive energy rates (RCET) for the export-oriented sectors for FY23 under a concessional tariff scheme. The federal cabinet ratified the ECC decision a day later on Oct 11.

All the power companies have been asked to ensure that bills issued to export-oriented industrial consumers are based on fixed rates approved by the ECC and the Cabinet with effect from Oct 1.

The price differential subsidy arising out of the fixed rate against an average basket price of about Rs32 per unit has been estimated at around Rs90-100bn. These export sectors would not be charged fuel cost adjustments and other taxes and Rs19.90 per unit would be the final rate until June 30, 2023.

After negotiations with textile exporters, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar announced early this month the continuation of RCET at Rs19.99 per unit to five export sectors.

Published in Dawn, October 21st, 2022

Follow Dawn Business on X, LinkedIn, Instagram and Facebook for insights on business, finance and tech from Pakistan and across the world.

Editorial

Balochistan outreach
Updated 11 Apr, 2025

Balochistan outreach

Terrorists must be dealt with firmly, but engaging in political activity cannot be equated with terrorism.
PSL season
Updated 11 Apr, 2025

PSL season

The season begins with the national team consistently underperforming and a war of words raging between franchise owners over the PSL’s standing.
Student woes
11 Apr, 2025

Student woes

BRIGHT young Pakistanis face an uncertain future in the US. The Trump administration, not content with merely...
Mineral wealth
Updated 10 Apr, 2025

Mineral wealth

The Baloch unrest is partly the result of the belief that the province’s resources are being used for the rest of the country rather than for Balochistan’s economic development.
Senate shortfalls
10 Apr, 2025

Senate shortfalls

THE latest Citizens’ Report by Pildat on the performance of the Senate of Pakistan is a sobering account of...
Crypto coup
10 Apr, 2025

Crypto coup

IT is quite the coup. One of the most recognisable names in the global cryptocurrency market has been roped in by ...