Pakistan Solar Power: News & Updates

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Each square is one in a hundred of Pakistan’s 1.83 million tubewells and lift pumps, by power source.

The social meaning is as important as the engineering. The colonial canal system created remarkable agricultural production, but it also made access to water dependent on settlement policy, official schedules, irrigation officials and upstream users.

The tubewell gives a farmer greater command over timing. It is a limited emancipation from the state and from the collective discipline of the watercourse.

Solar power strengthens that autonomy by replacing a recurring diesel or electricity bill with an upfront investment. Would this mean stronger rural classes or sub classes and their relative bargaining terms with urban classes? These are consequences that require more detailed study.

Each square is Pakistan’s irrigated land, split by source. Private tubewells (red) nearly doubled their share — from 18% to 31% — as surface canals lost ground.
But private freedom can create a public crisis.

A farmer who pumps groundwater receives the immediate benefit, while the falling water table, salinity and declining aquifer quality are shared by neighbours and future generations. Solar makes each additional hour of pumping appear almost costless.

The transition therefore demands much more research: Where are water tables falling fastest? How much pumping is replenished? Who can afford deeper wells? How are groundwater and river flows connected?

This census was done when solar adoption didn't even peak. By 2030 solar tubewells will be 90%, saving billions in $ diesel imports.

Pakistan need to work on attracting investment in solar/battery manufacturing though and save $ as much as possible along with creating hundreds of thousands of jobs.
 

Sindh Announces Free Solar Home Systems for 275,000 Families​

By Arsalan Khattak | Published Jul 17, 2026 | 4:44 pm

The Sindh government will provide free solar home systems to 275,000 low-income families under an Rs. 18.206 billion initiative aimed at expanding access to affordable and renewable energy across the province.

The update came during a review meeting chaired by Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah on Friday. He directed the Energy Department to accelerate the distribution and installation of the solar systems, saying the project will help improve the living standards of underprivileged families.

Under the initiative, 132,000 off-grid households in remote, desert, mountainous, and riverine areas and 143,000 on-grid protected consumers using up to 100 electricity units per month will receive the systems. Each eligible family will be provided with a 180-watt solar panel, a lithium battery, a fan, and LED lights free of cost.


Officials said 11,571 solar home systems have already been installed in several districts, including Karachi, Ghotki, Umerkot, Dadu, Tharparkar, Thatta, and Shaheed Benazirabad.

The project, which began in April 2025, is scheduled for completion by June 2027. Families registered under the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) will receive priority, while the government has pledged to ensure transparent distribution and timely completion of the project.
 

Pakistanis increasingly adopt battery storage as solar market evolves: report

  • Nearly 60% of total battery imports recorded so far arrived during 2025 alone

Pakistanis are increasingly investing in Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) alongside rooftop solar installations as changing energy policies, rising electricity costs, and concerns over power reliability drive consumers towards greater energy independence, according to a report.

According to a new analysis titled ‘From Solar Panels to Storage: Pakistan’s Battery Boom Begins’ by Renewables First, cumulative lithium-ion battery storage imports reached 7.6 gigawatt-hours (GWh) by the end of 2025, marking a 220% year-on-year increase. Nearly 60% of the total battery imports recorded so far arrived during 2025 alone.


The report attributes rapid growth to higher electricity tariffs, expanding base of rooftop solar users, declining battery prices, and reforms to the country’s net billing framework.

Senior Data Associate at Renewables First Huma Naveed said battery imports remained below 0.5 GWh annually between 2018 and 2023 before demand accelerated sharply over the past year.

The report noted that unlike many countries where battery storage is largely utility-driven, Pakistan’s market is being led by households.

Residential consumers account for 58% of all battery imports, with around one in every 26 solar-powered homes now equipped with battery storage, according to Naveed.

Program Director at Renewables First Muhammad Mustafa Amjad said Pakistan has already witnessed a consumer-led transition through rapid rooftop solar adoption, adding that battery storage is now following a similar but faster trajectory.

He stressed the need for policymakers to incorporate storage into energy planning at an early stage to ensure equitable and inclusive growth.

The report said Battery Energy Storage Systems would play a central role in Pakistan’s transition towards a more decentralised energy system. It added that global geopolitical uncertainties, volatile fuel prices, and recent changes to the net metering framework have reinforced the need to integrate consumer energy resources into national energy planning.

According to the report, greater adoption of battery storage could enhance energy security, reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels and improve the resilience of Pakistan’s power sector.
 

Pakistanis increasingly adopt battery storage as solar market evolves: report

  • Nearly 60% of total battery imports recorded so far arrived during 2025 alone

Pakistanis are increasingly investing in Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) alongside rooftop solar installations as changing energy policies, rising electricity costs, and concerns over power reliability drive consumers towards greater energy independence, according to a report.

According to a new analysis titled ‘From Solar Panels to Storage: Pakistan’s Battery Boom Begins’ by Renewables First, cumulative lithium-ion battery storage imports reached 7.6 gigawatt-hours (GWh) by the end of 2025, marking a 220% year-on-year increase. Nearly 60% of the total battery imports recorded so far arrived during 2025 alone.


The report attributes rapid growth to higher electricity tariffs, expanding base of rooftop solar users, declining battery prices, and reforms to the country’s net billing framework.

Senior Data Associate at Renewables First Huma Naveed said battery imports remained below 0.5 GWh annually between 2018 and 2023 before demand accelerated sharply over the past year.

The report noted that unlike many countries where battery storage is largely utility-driven, Pakistan’s market is being led by households.

Residential consumers account for 58% of all battery imports, with around one in every 26 solar-powered homes now equipped with battery storage, according to Naveed.

Program Director at Renewables First Muhammad Mustafa Amjad said Pakistan has already witnessed a consumer-led transition through rapid rooftop solar adoption, adding that battery storage is now following a similar but faster trajectory.

He stressed the need for policymakers to incorporate storage into energy planning at an early stage to ensure equitable and inclusive growth.

The report said Battery Energy Storage Systems would play a central role in Pakistan’s transition towards a more decentralised energy system. It added that global geopolitical uncertainties, volatile fuel prices, and recent changes to the net metering framework have reinforced the need to integrate consumer energy resources into national energy planning.

According to the report, greater adoption of battery storage could enhance energy security, reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels and improve the resilience of Pakistan’s power sector.

Good quality 16 kwh lithium battery cost Rs6-7 lakh in Pakistan. This can go down to Rs3 lakh if Pakistan start local manufacturing of sodium batteries by 2030.

Imagine Rs3 lakh 16kwh sodium battery that last 30 years. Future is bright thanks to China advancement.

Even if everything goes right, grid electricity will be Rs35/unit in best case scenario by 2035. Solar/battery combo that will last 30 years? Rs5/unit. Per capita electricity consumption will go sky high, matching average USA household electricity consumption with just Rs15 lakh solar/battery investment. Hopefully govt will make financing solar/battery easy when local manufacturing start.
 

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