Pakistan’s PM Shehbaz Sharif launches $3.5 billion Chinese-designed nuclear energy project

Pakistani Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif (center), Federal Ministers and dignitaries from China officials performed the groundbreaking of the 5th Unit of Chashma Nuclear Power plant (C-5) in Chashma, Pakistan on July 14, 2023. (Photo courtesy: Prime Minister's office)
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Updated 14 July 2023
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Pakistan’s PM Shehbaz Sharif launches $3.5 billion Chinese-designed nuclear energy project

  • Chashma-5 will be constructed at a site along the left embankment of the fast-flowing Indus River in Mianwali
  • Pakistan generates 8 percent electricity from nuclear power plants and plans to increase that figure to 20 percent by 2030

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday launched the construction of a 1,200-megawatt Chinese-designed nuclear energy project, which will be built at a cost of $3.5 billion as part of the government efforts to generate more clean energy in the Islamic nation.

The ceremony to mark the project’s start comes less than a month after Pakistan signed an agreement with China’s National Nuclear Corporation Overseas in the capital, Islamabad, to construct a Hualong One reactor — a third-generation nuclear reactor and is considered safer because of the latest security features.

Pakistan and China are longtime allies. Pakistan’s relations with Beijing are so close that its leadership calls China their “Iron Brother.” China is also building roads, bridges, power plants, and railways to link its far west with the Chinese-built port of Gwadar on the Indian Ocean.

The nuclear power plant known as Chashma-5 will be constructed at a site along the left embankment of the fast-flowing Indus River in Mianwali, a district in the eastern Punjab province. The site is already home to four Chinese-supplied nuclear power plants that were built in recent decades.

Sharif, in his televised remarks at a gathering of Pakistani and Chinese officials in Mianwali, said the Chashma-5 nuclear energy project by itself was a “huge milestone, a huge success story, and a wonderful symbol of the cooperation between two great friends.”

He said Pakistan will get clean, efficient and cheaper energy at the completion of the project.

Pakistan, which got its first nuclear power plant from Canada, currently generates only 8 percent of its electricity from nuclear power plants and plans to increase that figure to 20 percent by 2030.

In recent months, China gave $5 billion in loans to Pakistan to help the country unlock a bailout from the International Monetary Fund to tackle a serious economic crisis. The IMF approved a $3-billion bailout Wednesday, after keeping it on hold since December.

On Friday, Sharif said his country will never forget the Chinese financial assistance that was given to his country when it faced a risk of default. It was a “very valuable contribution at a very difficult time, and the nation will never forget it,” he said.

Sharif, whose term as premier ends in August, said Pakistan is no longer at risk of a default.


Too warm to freeze: Climate shift threatens ice hockey in Pakistan’s Hunza Valley

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Too warm to freeze: Climate shift threatens ice hockey in Pakistan’s Hunza Valley

  • Rising temperatures, falling snowfall disrupt community-run tournament dependent on natural ice
  • Scientists report shorter snow seasons across Hindu Kush-Himalayan region as climate risks grow

HUNZA, Pakistan: Aleena Gul used to watch the pool beside her home in Pakistan’s Hunza Valley freeze solid each winter, transforming it into a makeshift ice hockey rink.

This year, it barely froze at all.

“If we see, there’s a big difference between 2018 and now in 2026,” said Gul, a local player whose family has hosted the community tournament for eight seasons.

“Winter used to begin in November and everything would freeze, . It’s January now and the ice still hasn’t frozen properly,” said Gul, a local player whose family has hosted the community tournament for eight seasons.

The change has disrupted a small but growing winter sports tradition in the mountainous region near the Chinese border, where residents say colder, longer winters once provided reliable natural ice.

Scientists studying the wider Hindu Kush-Himalayan region have reported fewer extreme cold events and shorter snow seasons, with snowfall increasingly failing to settle. Weather data for Hunza shows winter precipitation down by about 30 percent since the late 2010s, with some recent winters two to three degrees Celsius warmer.

That is a challenge for a region reliant on visitors, where winter tourism depends heavily on snowfall and freezing temperatures.

The community-run ice hockey tournament in Hunza depends entirely on natural ice. When Gul’s pool failed to freeze properly this year, organizers scrambled to find an alternative venue nearly two hours north, in a town close to the Chinese border.

Even there, conditions were difficult.

“I expected better ice conditions, but when I saw the rink I felt a bit sad. Many of our players fell. The surface had too many bumps and wasn’t strong,” said Yahya Karim, another player.

Of three matches scheduled on the first day, only one went ahead.

“Today, we got ready at almost around 9 o’clock. When we got called for the match, we saw that the ice was not in a good condition. So, all these things are very unexpected for us. And this is a side effect of climate change,” Gul said.

Naseer Uddin, co-founder of the youth organization SCARF, said volunteers had worked for about a week preparing the arena.

“We worked on this arena for about a week. We had planned [a match] here. Then, suddenly, when the sun came out today, so we had to switch suddenly because the ice in this arena has been spoiled,” he said.

Sadiq Saleem, president of the Altit Town Management Society, said residents were witnessing a noticeable change.

“We are witnessing a sudden shift in Hunza’s weather pattern, [both] in the snowfall and freezing [temperature] here. We are seeing a big shift in the intensity of winter here,” he said.

The girls’ match eventually went ahead, and Gul’s team emerged victorious. But the uncertainty over ice conditions has left many wondering how long the tradition can survive.

Climate change has become a growing concern for Pakistan, which contributes less than 1 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions yet is frequently ranked among the countries most vulnerable to global warming.

This week, Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority warned of an elevated risk of glacial lake outburst floods in the north as rising temperatures threaten to accelerate snow and glacier melt. Seasonal forecasts point to higher-than-normal temperatures and possible early heatwave conditions in Gilgit-Baltistan and upper Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, regions that include Hunza.

For now, players in the valley are making do with what winter brings. But as temperatures rise, even a simple backyard rink is no longer guaranteed.