CPEC loans have a 15-year grace period. Payments for any CPEC projects don't start until 2030s.
CPEC Projects (infrastructure under 1.0) amount to $65 billion. That doesn't mean the Government of Pakistan will be repaying $65 billion in loans. A large chunk of the loans under CPEC belongs to private companies / investors.
The total debt Pakistan owes to China is $26 billion out of total external debt of $138 billion. This is not direct loans Pakistan has taken from China but loans that Pakistan took from other places which it then transferred to China so the country didn't have to deal with so many lenders.
Great. The more the merrier. But this is not in any way going to replace the grid.
It was reported earlier in the week that Pakistan has imported nearly
55 GW of solar panels in the last 5 years.
During the last fiscal year, 14 GW of solar panels were imported in the first 10 months. This year it's down to 7 GW in the first 10 months.
Imports have reduced by 50%, yet tens of millions of rooftops are still without any solar panels.
What happened?
I very much doubt it if people will rely on personal solar panels indefinitely. People will only chose this option if they have to.
Sooner or later large solar farms are going to pop up everywhere that people are likely to connect to instead of adding more and more panels on their roofs.
My understanding is just because Pakistan has 48 GW of "installed capacity", it does not automatically mean "available capacity". In other words, there's no surplus electricity that Pakistan has that it can start exporting to countries like Afghanistan, Iran, etc.