‘Immense hunger’: Amateur snooker world champion aims to win even bigger for Pakistan

Ahsan Ramzan, youngest winner in history of the World Snooker Championship, speaks to Arab News in Karachi, Pakistan, on March 20, 2022 (AN Photo)
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Updated 25 March 2022
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‘Immense hunger’: Amateur snooker world champion aims to win even bigger for Pakistan

  • Ahsan Ramzan became youngest winner in history of World Snooker Championship earlier this month
  • It was a bittersweet victory without his late father, always his biggest inspiration and strictest coach

KARACHI: It was a bittersweet moment for Ahsan Ramzan earlier this month as a crowd gathered around him after he became the youngest winner in history of the World Snooker Championship.
For 16-year-old Ramzan, the March 11 victory at the International Billiards and Snooker Federation (IBSF) event was incomplete without his father who raised him after he lost his mother in early childhood, and who until his death four years ago remained the snooker player’s greatest inspiration and strictest mentor.
“If my parents were alive today, I would have given them the trophy,” Ramzan told Arab News in an interview. “They would have hugged me in excitement, which would have been a huge moment for me.”
“Now, I will take this trophy and put it on their graves,” he said. “I want them to know their dream has come true.”




Ahsan Ramzan, youngest winner in history of the World Snooker Championship, poses for a picture with his trophy in Karachi, Pakistan, on March 20, 2022 (AN Photo)

The youngest of six siblings, Ramzan’s father always pushed him to concentrate on his studies and it was only later that he began to support his dream of becoming a professional snooker player. At one point, Ramzan remembered being sent by his family to buy milk but going instead to a billiard club. When his father found him there a few hours later, he was so furious he started beating him with a cue.
But years later, Ramzan said, the same man would force his son to leave him on the deathbed and participate in a national championship.
“It was devastating,” he said, recalling how he had to rush back from the tournament after learning that his father had passed away. “That was not less than doomsday for me.”
After their father’s death, Ramzan’s brothers gave him an ultimatum: join the family poultry business, resume education or risk losing financial support. The boy chose snooker and thus left Karachi to live with his sister in Lahore. 
“So many times, it happened that I had to go for a match and I didn’t tell anyone and would go by foot and come back,” Ramzan said, speaking about his time in Lahore where his snooker club was an hour’s walk away from his sister’s home.
If these hardships weren’t enough, the pandemic too almost broke the teenager’s spirit after he twice missed junior international events postponed due to the coronavirus.
But he was third time lucky and qualified for the senior international level.
Before reaching the finals, however, Ramzan had to face two-time world champion Muhammad Asif.
“It was an honor to face him as he was a Pakistani player and a two-time champion,” he said. “I said that until I didn’t beat a champion, I couldn’t become a champion.”
After beating Asif, Ramzan went on to defeat accomplished Iranian cueist Amir Sarkosh to win the world title.
Now, he is eyeing more international games and hopes to win even bigger for Pakistan. 
“I will participate in world games ... I will bring something for Pakistan in future tours and championships,” Ramzan said. 
“Any player who doesn’t have hunger, I believe he can do nothing. I have immense hunger.”


Power minister defends solar net-metering overhaul after Pakistan PM orders review

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Power minister defends solar net-metering overhaul after Pakistan PM orders review

  • Leghari says 466,000 net-meter users earn up to 50% returns while 35.5 million consumers bear higher costs
  • NEPRA’s new rules require full grid tariffs for usage and lower, market-linked rates for excess solar exports

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s power minister on Thursday defended controversial changes to rooftop solar net-metering rules, arguing that generous returns for a small number of users were unfairly burdening millions of other electricity consumers, as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif ordered a review a day earlier.

The dispute centers on changes to the net-metering regime, under which households and businesses with rooftop solar panels can sell excess electricity to the national grid. The National Electric Power Regulatory Authority's (NEPRA) new compensation rules require consumers to pay full tariffs for electricity drawn from the grid while receiving a lower, market-linked rate for excess power they export.

Critics have called the revisions “anti-solar” and warned they would undermine renewable energy adoption and hurt household finances.

Power Minister Sardar Owais Ahmed Khan Leghari told the National Assembly that only 6,000-7,000 megawatts of Pakistan’s estimated 22,000 megawatts of installed solar capacity fall under net-metering, covering around 466,000 consumers out of 35.5 million nationwide electricity users.

“If a net-metering consumer earns a 50% return on his investment because of the savings he gets as a meter user, while IPPs [independent power producers] get 17% and bank deposits earn 8%, isn’t a 50% return a good rate,” he asked.

“I generate electricity at Rs. 5 and send it to the grid at Rs. 27,” he continued. “The average price at which we buy electricity from the rest of the grid is Rs. 8.31. Is buying at Rs. 27 justified?”

Leghari said under the revised framework, returns for net-meter users would fall to around 37%, adding that even at that level, rooftop solar power generation remains financially attractive.

He said the changes were aimed at ensuring “fair pricing” and reducing cross-subsidies borne by the broader consumer base.

“Besides them, there are 35.5 million other consumers who do not even use net-metering,” he said, adding that if electricity costs for the wider public fell by up to Rs. 1.50 per unit, the adjustment would be justified.

Leghari's statement follows the prime minister's instructions to file a review in response to the new NEPRA rules, as he directed his administration to protect existing consumer contracts while ensuring the policy does not shift the financial burden onto non-solar electricity users.