LAHORE, Feb 23: Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif says German company AEG is executing 400MW and 50MW solar energy projects in Cholistan and investing Rs100 billion in these schemes.

The Punjab government has also signed two Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) with German company Energiequelle and Austrian firm Andritz Hydro for cooperation in energy sector.

The CM was talking to the media on the occasion of signing ceremony of MoUs at Model Town on Saturday, says a handout.

He said the 50MW project would start generating electricity in June 2013 whereas the 400MW scheme would also be completed within a year.

He said German company AEG would charge at the rate of 18 cent and sovereign guarantee would be sought from the federal government for the projects.

The energy secretary on behalf of the Punjab government and Helmut Fugemann, director (sales) of Energiequelle, signed the MoU.

The energy secretary and representative of Austrian company Andritz Hydro signed the other MoU. Under the agreement, the German firm will install the 300MW solar energy project whereas the Austrian firm would cooperate in hydel power projects.

Opinion

Editorial

Shortcut tactics
Updated 25 Mar, 2025

Shortcut tactics

IMF’s decision to veto move to reduce retail power tariffs seems to be against interests of middle-class consumers.
Unforced error
Updated 25 Mar, 2025

Unforced error

State must not push ordinary citizens away with its excesses when dealing with Balochistan.
Losing again
25 Mar, 2025

Losing again

WHEN Pakistan’s high-risk Twenty20 approach did not work, there was no fallback plan and they collapsed in a heap...
Climate action
Updated 24 Mar, 2025

Climate action

Waiting for outside help to arrive will only aggravate our climate challenges and not mitigate them.
TB burden
24 Mar, 2025

TB burden

AS the world observes World Tuberculosis Day, we confront the sombre fact that despite being both preventable and...
Unsafe passages
24 Mar, 2025

Unsafe passages

WRETCHED social conditions add an extra layer of cruelty to ordinary lives. The UN’s migration agency says that...