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⚡ Pakistan Renewable Energy Power Plants Knowledge Base
Comprehensive Overview of Pakistan’s Renewable Power Infrastructure, including Hydro, Solar, Wind and Nuclear
📊 Knowledge Section
Renewable Power Generation by Type
Pakistan’s renewable power generation infrastructure consists of:
- Storage Dams: Major installations like Tarbela (3,478 MW) and Mangla (1,000 MW) provide both electricity generation and water storage capabilities
- Run of River: Hydro plants using natural river flow with minimal storage
- Canal Fall: Hydro potential captured from hydraulic head at irrigation canal drops/barrages
- PV Modules: Photovoltaic panels, with different installed module quantity
- WTGs: Modern wind turbine generators (WTGs) with capacities typically between 20-66 units per farm
- PWR / PHWR: Pressurized (Light/Heavy) Water Reactors at nuclear plants
Major Owner Categories
Geographic Distribution (Renewables)
Major Renewable Generation Hubs:
- Sindh: The Jhimpir–Thatta–Gharo wind corridor hosts dozens of wind farms (Artistic, Hawa, Liberty I–II, Master, Metro, Three Gorges I–III, UEP, Zephyr, Zorlu, Western, etc.). Solar sites also appear in Thatta and along the lower Indus (e.g., Siachen, Ourson).
- Punjab: The Quaid‑e‑Azam Solar Park (Bahawalpur) concentrates multiple 100‑MW class projects (Apollo, Best Green, Crest, Quaid‑e‑Azam Solar, Zurlu). Punjab also has many canal‑fall/rooftop‑scale hydels and PV sites (Marala, Rasul, Chichoki, Nandipur, Shadiwal, Mehmood Kot, Lahore industrial PV).
- Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK): Dense cluster of run‑of‑river hydropower along Swat, Panjkora, Kunhar, Siran and Chitral rivers (Daral Khwar, Koto, Suki Kinari, Lawi, Ranolia, Karora, Jabori, Golen Gol).
- Balochistan: Utility‑scale PV around Quetta/Bostan (Enertech Quetta Solar, Enertech Bostan Solar) with high‑insolation plateaus suitable for further expansion.
- AJK / GB & Upper Indus: Large hydro baseload and storage along the Indus cascade (Mangla in AJK; Diamer Basha and Dasu in the GB/KP corridor), complemented by medium hydels.
- National irrigation network: Numerous small and medium canal‑fall hydels distributed across Punjab’s irrigation canals (Upper/Lower Chenab, Upper Jhelum, Lower Bari Doab, Balloki‑Sulemanki link), providing run‑of‑canal renewables.
Largest Power Plants
| Plant Name | Capacity (MW) | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Diamer Basha | 4,500 | Hydro Power Plant |
| Dasu | 4,320 | Hydro Power Plant |
| Tarbela Power Station | 3,478 | Hydro Dam |
| Ghazi Brotha Power Station | 1,450 | Hydro Power Plant |
| Tarbela, 4th Extension | 1,410 | Hydro Dam |
| Mangla Power Station | 1,000 | Hydro Power Plant |
| Suki Kinari Hydropower Project | 840 | Hydro Power Plant |
| Karot Hydropower Plant | 732 | Hydro Power Plant |
| Milergo Pakistan Wind Plant | 250 | Wind Farm |
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Sindh leads in wind power with the Jhimpir and Thatta wind corridors hosting dozens of wind farms. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa dominates in hydroelectric generation due to its mountainous terrain and river systems.
Based on the documented facilities, Pakistan has over 25,000 MW of installed capacity across hydro, solar, wind, and nuclear sources. This includes major installations like Tarbela (3,478 MW) and numerous smaller facilities distributed nationwide.
Power projects are developed by:
- WAPDA (Water and Power Development Authority) for major hydro projects
- Independent Power Producers (IPPs) under various government policies
- Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) for nuclear plants
The Tarbela Power Station is the largest single facility with 3,478 MW capacity, followed by the under-construction Diamer Basha (4,500 MW) and Dasu (4,320 MW) projects.
Wind farms are typically located in sparsely populated areas like Jhimpir and Thatta, minimizing community impact while providing local employment and development opportunities.
Hydroelectric reliability varies by type:
- Storage dams provide consistent baseload power
- Run-of-river projects depend on seasonal water flows
- Canal-based systems operate with irrigation schedules
Thermal power plants are distributed across all provinces:
- Solar: 10-100 MW per project
- Wind: 30-250 MW per wind farm
- Small Hydro: 1-20 MW
- Large Hydro: 100-4,500 MW
Pakistan has established several IPP (Independent Power Producer) policy frameworks over time:
- 1995 Hydel Policy: First major private sector participation, established foundational IPPs
- 2002 Policy
- 2006 Renewable Policy
- 2007 Balochistan Policy
- 2015 Policy: Latest framework including CPEC projects
Each policy offers different incentive structures, tariff mechanisms, and regulatory frameworks to encourage private investment.



