PM Khan virtually inaugurates Karachi’s K-2 nuclear power plant

In this file photo, Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan addresses a ceremony in Islamabad on February 17, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 21 May 2021
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PM Khan virtually inaugurates Karachi’s K-2 nuclear power plant

  • Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission connected the K-2 plant to the national grid
  • In 2013, China committed $6.5 billion to finance construction of a major nuclear power project in Karachi

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Friday virtually inaugurated the 1,100 megawatts nuclear power plant, the Karachi Nuclear Power Plant Unit-2 (K-2).

The Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) connected the K-2 plant to the national grid in March.
In 2013, China committed $6.5 billion to finance the construction of a major nuclear power project in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi, which would have two reactors with a capacity of 1,100 megawatts each.
Addressing the inauguration ceremony, Khan said the plant would help Pakistan with it goal of generating “clean energy”.
“This is important for us because Pakistan is among top 10 countries at risk due to climate change,” the prime minister said.
“Glaciers are melting at a rapid speed, and our coming generations will face an acute water shortage as well as food security issues if the effects of climate change are not reversed,” Khan said, saying clean energy was “important” for Pakistan. “Unfortunately, we have not focused on producing energy from water despite the country having the potential to do so.”
Last December, PM Khan said 60 percent of all energy produced in the country by 2030 would be clean and obtained through renewables, while speaking at a Climate Ambition Summit’s virtual meeting.
“By 2030, 60 percent of all energy produced in Pakistan will be clean energy through renewables,” Khan said. “30pc of all our vehicles will be [run] on electricity.”


Pakistan finance minister touts debt discipline, export focus at Davos panel

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Pakistan finance minister touts debt discipline, export focus at Davos panel

  • Aurangzeb says debt must fund exports, not consumption, for sustainable growth
  • He says Pakistan used fiscal buffers to respond to floods without external appeals

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said on Wednesday disciplined borrowing, export-led growth and careful debt management were central to stabilizing the country’s economy, as Islamabad looks to unlock new sources of growth amid rising global debt levels.

Speaking at a panel discussion on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, he said debt was not inherently harmful if used productively, but warned that emerging economies such as Pakistan could not afford to deploy borrowed funds for consumption.

“For countries like Pakistan, debt must be channeled into investments that generate exportable surplus,” Aurangzeb said, according to a statement circulated by the Finance Division. “It is not about the availability of debt or funding, but how wisely and effectively it is steered to create long-term economic value.”

Pakistan has been pursuing fiscal reforms as part of an International Monetary Fund-backed stabilization program, including cutting subsidies, broadening the tax base and restructuring state-owned enterprises, as the government seeks to restore macroeconomic stability and revive growth.

Aurangzeb said Pakistan had reduced its debt-to-GDP ratio to 70 percent from 75 percent, achieved a primary fiscal surplus and brought inflation down from a peak of 38 percent to single digits, allowing the central bank to cut its policy rate to 10.5 percent.

He also flagged ongoing debt-management reforms, including liability management operations and buybacks, and said Pakistan plans to enter China’s capital markets with its first Panda bond, structured as a green bond.

Addressing climate risks, Aurangzeb said building fiscal buffers had allowed Pakistan to respond to recent floods using domestic resources rather than international emergency appeals, underscoring the need for resilience in climate-vulnerable economies.

He added that public-private partnerships and capital markets were playing a growing role in financing development, citing a $3.6 billion syndicated financing for a major copper mining project expected to generate $2.8 billion in annual exports from 2028.

The finance minister is part of Pakistan’s delegation visiting Davos for the annual gathering of global leaders and investors.

The delegation is led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who highlighted the country’s shift toward an export-driven growth model, with a focus on minerals, information technology, artificial intelligence and digital services, while speaking at a breakfast event on the sidelines of the forum.