Ads

Despite weekly holiday, Saturday starts with 1,636 MW of load shedding

Photo generated by AI

Ads

PGCB data shows that the country generated 12,670 MW at 12 noon against a demand for 14,000 MW on Saturday.

UNB

Publisted at 5:02 PM, Sat Apr 6th, 2024

Despite lower electricity demand on the weekly holiday on Saturday than on any working day, the day started with a load shedding of 1,636 MW to serve a demand of 14,100 MW.

These power cuts started at 1am when electricity demand always remains very low.

Official statistics from the Power Grid Company of Bangladesh (PGCB) reveal that the country was generating 12,387 MW in the early hours of Saturday (at 1am).

PGCB data shows that the country generated 12,670 MW at 12 noon against a demand for 14,000 MW on Saturday. The highest demand is projected to be 15,300 MW in the evening peak hours and 13,400 MW in the daytime peak time.

Officials apprehend that as the day progresses amid the sweltering heat of summer, the extent of load shedding will increase, and the power supply situation will worsen further.

Mostly rural areas have been the victims of the power cuts as the authorities concerned are pursuing a policy to avoid load shedding in urban areas, mostly in large cities, including the capital Dhaka. This is being done to avoid public wrath, said the officials.

In the previous week, on Thursday, the last working day, the highest load shedding was recorded to be 1,824 MW.

“This week, the extent of load shedding may exceed 2,000 MW,” said a senior official at the Bangladesh Power Development Board (BPDB).

On Friday, the highest generation was 12,401 MW during the daytime and 14,245 MW in the evening peak hours.

BPDB officials noted that the situation is unlikely to improve until gas supply to the power plants is increased.

He informed that a good number of power plants with about 3,000 MW of electricity generation capacity remained out of operation due to gas shortages.

Meanwhile, officials of the state-owned Petrobangla said that the Summit Group’s LNG terminal failed to resume operation on April 3 as scheduled.

“Now, we hope it may be able to commission and resume operation on April 8,” M. Kamruzzaman, director (operation and mining), told UNB.

He also informed that if Summit's LNG terminal resumes operation, it will add 500 million cubic feet per day (MMCFD) of gas to the national grid. The LNG terminal went into routine maintenance in the first week of March this year.

Petrobangla statistics show that the country's gas supply was 2,640 MMCFD on Thursday against a demand for more than 4,000 MMCFD.

Ads

related news