• Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Daily The Business
  • Privacy Policy
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Daily The Business
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
DTB
No Result
View All Result
DTB

Pakistan Must Incentivize Grid-Scale Battery Storage — Not Penalize Solar Growth

March 4, 2026
in Tech
Pakistan Must Incentivize Grid-Scale Battery Storage — Not Penalize Solar Growth
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterWhatsapp

Pakistan’s energy transition stands at a decisive inflection point. Over the past decade, the country has expanded rooftop solar, wind capacity in Sindh, and hydropower generation. Yet the structural flaw in our power system remains unchanged: we generate clean electricity during the day but burn imported fossil fuels at night to meet peak demand.

This imbalance is not merely technical — it is fiscal. In FY 2023–24, Pakistan’s fossil fuel import bill accounted for roughly 10.6% of GDP and nearly one-third of total imports. A significant portion of this expenditure is driven by expensive evening peak generation, primarily LNG-based plants operating for limited hours at high marginal costs. Meanwhile, distributed solar is estimated to produce nearly 20 TWh annually — much of which cannot be optimally utilized after sunset.

Recent net-metering reforms by National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) aim to reduce the financial burden on distribution companies. While concerns regarding cross-subsidization are legitimate, discouraging rooftop solar without enabling structural solutions risks slowing renewable momentum and eroding investor confidence. The real problem is not solar growth — it is the absence of storage.

Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) provide the missing link. By storing surplus daytime generation and discharging during peak hours, storage directly displaces high-cost fossil generation. Even a modest 5% reduction in peak fossil dispatch could conservatively save approximately $150 million annually in fuel costs. A 10% displacement would multiply those savings while improving grid stability and reducing reliance on peaker plants.

The policy imperative is clear: shift from restricting distributed generation to incentivizing grid-scale storage.

Emerging markets such as India, South Africa, and Chile have demonstrated that storage enhances system reliability, reduces renewable curtailment, and strengthens fiscal discipline. Pakistan can follow a similar pathway by integrating storage procurement under the National Transmission and Despatch Company (NTDC), introducing ancillary service markets, and implementing time-of-use tariffs that reward peak-hour discharge rather than daytime export.

Technological solutions are already mature and commercially deployable. Modern integrated platforms such as the Livoltek BESS-60kW/261kWh provide a compelling example of how storage can be engineered for emerging-market conditions.

First, environmental resilience is critical. High Ingress Protection (IP) ratings ensure protection against dust, heat, and humidity — essential for Pakistan’s climate. Equipment durability directly influences lifecycle cost and grid reliability.

Second, performance flexibility through configurable C-rates — 0.5C and 0.75C — allows optimization for either longer-duration energy shifting or higher power output for aggressive peak shaving and frequency support. This operational adaptability enables utilities and commercial users to align storage performance with grid-service requirements.

Third, scalability defines economic viability. The ability to operate up to 10 units in parallel allows modular expansion from distributed commercial installations to aggregated grid-support clusters. This reduces upfront capital burden and improves project bankability.

Most importantly, integrated “one-window” architecture addresses a major industry gap. Many manufacturers provide battery cabinets without Power Conversion Systems (PCS), while others supply PCS without integrated battery ecosystems. A unified platform combining lithium battery modules, advanced Battery Management System (BMS), bidirectional PCS, and Energy Management System (EMS) under a single brand eliminates multi-vendor integration risk, simplifies commissioning, and creates a single point of technical accountability. For utilities and large-scale users, this reduces operational complexity and long-term system risk.

From a public finance perspective, storage investment compares favorably to continued fossil fuel dependence. A $500 million phased storage deployment, financed through blended public-private partnerships and climate finance, could achieve payback within three to four years if it reduces peak fossil generation by just 10%. Beyond fuel savings, additional benefits include reduced grid instability, lower capacity payments to inefficient peakers, and decreased transmission congestion.

Energy policy must move beyond short-term tariff adjustments toward structural optimization. Penalizing solar growth addresses symptoms; incentivizing storage addresses the cause.

Pakistan does not face a renewable energy problem — it faces a balancing problem. Storage is the balancing instrument that converts solar abundance into fiscal savings, grid stability, and energy sovereignty.

The global energy transition has already made its direction clear: generation without storage creates volatility; generation with storage creates resilience. For Pakistan, incentivizing grid-scale battery storage is no longer optional — it is an economic necessity.

Tags: BatteryGridScaleGrowthIncentivizePakistanPenalizeSolarStorage
Share15Tweet10Send
Previous Post

Rupee records marginal gain against US dollar

Next Post

Sky-high prices steal the spotlight from Eid 2026 collections

Related Posts

The AI boom is minting startup multimillionaires at an unprecedented speed
AI

The AI boom is minting startup multimillionaires at an unprecedented speed

March 4, 2026
PTA Wants Your Mobile Phone Balance to Stay Valid For Life
Tech

PTA Wants Your Mobile Phone Balance to Stay Valid For Life

March 3, 2026
What US companies are telling their Middle East-based employees during the Iran conflict
iran

What US companies are telling their Middle East-based employees during the Iran conflict

March 2, 2026
Jack Dorsey stokes fears of an AI jobs apocalypse. Here's what it means for you.
AI

Jack Dorsey stokes fears of an AI jobs apocalypse. Here’s what it means for you.

March 1, 2026
Claude hits No. 1 on App Store as ChatGPT users defect in show of support for Anthropic's Pentagon stance
anthropic

Claude hits No. 1 on App Store as ChatGPT users defect in show of support for Anthropic’s Pentagon stance

March 1, 2026
Elon Musk warns Tesla employees over future of German megafactory ahead of union election
elon-musk

Elon Musk warns Tesla employees over future of German megafactory ahead of union election

February 27, 2026

Popular Post

  • FRSHAR Mail

    FRSHAR Mail set to redefine secure communication, data privacy

    127 shares
    Share 51 Tweet 32
  • How to avoid buyer’s remorse when raising venture capital

    33 shares
    Share 337 Tweet 211
  • Microsoft to pay off cloud industry group to end EU antitrust complaint

    55 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Capacity utilisation of Pakistan’s cement industry drops to lowest on record

    49 shares
    Share 20 Tweet 12
  • Inflation is down in Europe. But the European Central Bank is in no hurry to make more rate cuts

    48 shares
    Share 19 Tweet 12
American Dollar Exchange Rate
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Daily The Business
  • Privacy Policy
Write us: info@dailythebusiness.com

© 2021 Daily The Business

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Daily The Business
  • Privacy Policy

© 2021 Daily The Business

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.