Impact of US–Iran War on Pakistan Electricity 2026

USA AND IRAN WAR

The ongoing 2026 Iran war has directly affected Pakistan’s energy system.

🔥 Key Effects:

  • LNG supply disruption from Gulf countries
  • Fuel imports delayed or reduced
  • Electricity production dropped significantly

Because of the war:

  • LNG-based power plants are producing much less electricity
  • Pakistan is forced to use expensive furnace oil

This has created a shortfall of around 3,400 MW, leading to longer load shedding hours.

Why Load Shedding Increased in 2026

1. Fuel Shortage

Pakistan relies on exotic fuel (LNG, oil). War disrupted the supply.

2. Low Hydropower Production

Water levels in dams dropped, reducing electricity generation.

3. Huge Electricity Claim

  • Demand jumped from 9,000 MW to 20,000 MW
  • The summer season increased AC usage

4. System Issues

  • Old transmission lines
  • Electricity theft
  • Circular debt problems

Kifayat (Austerity Measures by Government)

To control the crisis, the government introduced “kifayat” (energy-saving policies).

Main Measures:

  • Reduced electricity use in government offices
  • Early closing of markets
  • Limited use of air conditioners
  • Promotion of energy-saving appliances
  • Encouraging solar energy

These steps aim to:
✔ Reduce fuel imports
✔ Lower electricity cost
✔ Control load shedding

🏠 Load Shedding Categories (Feeder System)

WAPDA uses a feeder-based system:

CategoryLoad Shedding
Low lossesMinimal or no outage
Medium losses2–6 hours
High losses8–12+ hours

📉 Current Situation Summary

  • Electricity shortfall: ~3,400 MW
  • Daily outages: 2 to 7+ hours
  • Main reason: Fuel crisis + war impact
  • Government response: Kifayat policy + load management

🔮 Future Outlook

If the US–Iran conflict continues, Pakistan may face:

  • More load shedding
  • Higher electricity prices
  • Increased reliance on solar energy

However, if fuel supply improves, the situation may stabilize.

Conclusion

Pakistan’s 2026 load shedding embarrassment is not just a local issue—it is strongly linked to global politics, fuel shortages, and economic challenges. The government is trying to manage the situation through scheduled outages and energy-saving policies, but the situation may remain difficult in the short term.

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