Wednesday, August 08, 2007

 

Electricity output meets only half of domestic needs

Electricity
(Azzaman) - The Ministry of Electricity has finally acknowledged its inability to meet the country’s needs, blaming the current chronic shortages on lack of fuel. Informed sources at the ministry said current output was less than half what the country needs amid soaring temperatures brushing 50 degrees centigrade. The sources said electrical generation capacity is even worse than in the months before the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
The ministry blames the present prolonged outages, which may continue non-stop in certain areas for several consecutive days, on fuel shortages. Rows are reported to have broken out at cabinet meetings between Oil Minister Hussain Shahristani and Electricity Minister Kareem Hassan over fuel supplies. Hassan is said to have accused Shahristani of failing to honor commitments to supply power stations with their fuel needs, saying that much of the reduced capacity is due to stoppages caused by lack of fuel.
Deputy Prime Minister Burham Saleh, who heads the government’s economic commission, has said Shahristani has consistently showed “non-commitment to make available the fuel quantities the Ministry of Electricity needs.” Besides power problems, the country faces severe fuel shortages with refineries running at much below capacity. Iraq currently spends hundreds of millions of dollars on fuel imports from neighboring countries.
Aziz Shammari of the Electricity Ministry said the country had never witnessed “this kind of power crisis” since the 1990s when punitive U.N. trade sanctions were still in placed. “Electricity generation can hardly meet half of the country’s needs. Power output has never been as worse as it is today since 2003,” Shammari said.

Labels: , , , ,






<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?