Tag: ADS

  • Impact of NEPRA Prosumer Regulations 2026: A Case Study for Textile Sector

    Pakistan’s rooftop solar sector has reached a critical policy crossroads, where the economics of distributed energy are being reshaped by regulatory choices rather than technology costs. NEPRA’s shift from net-metering to net-billing, which changes how industrial prosumers are compensated for energy exported to the grid, has significant consequences for energy-intensive industries like textile mills that are already navigating cost pressures and international sustainability expectations. The core finding of this study is that settlement design, not panel prices, now determines whether rooftop solar remains a viable investment for industrial consumers at different scales.

    While larger and medium-sized firms have pathways to adapt through storage integration and commercial arrangements, smaller enterprises face real risks of financial marginalisation or outright disconnection from the grid. The study argues that net-billing is not inherently a bad policy, but implemented in isolation, it risks slowing solar adoption, reducing grid visibility, and ultimately shifting costs onto the consumers least able to bear them. A well-sequenced transition that rewards flexibility, recognises storage, and enables aggregation can align private investment with system-wide needs, and the regulatory choices made now will determine whether Pakistan’s distributed energy momentum becomes a managed asset or a missed opportunity.

  • Exploring Competitive Trading Bilateral Contracts Market (CTBCM) through Fingertips’ Model

    Pakistan’s electricity sector is at a historic turning point. After decades under the Single-Buyer Model, which concentrated procurement through CPPA-G and fueled high costs and circular debt, the Competitive Trading Bilateral Contracts Market (CTBCM) was launched on May 31, 2022, allowing bulk consumers of 1 MW or more to buy directly from generators. Today, Pakistan has 46.6 GW of installed capacity, with peak demand projected to reach 29 GW by 2025, circular debt at 2.4 trillion PKR, and FY24 capacity payments totaling 1.9 trillion PKR. This report offers a data-driven analysis of CTBCM’s origins, current operations, future outlook to 2030, and implications for industry and policy, based on verified sources including NEPRA, CPPA-G, NTDC, IEEFA, World Bank, and ADB.

  • Green Financing: Pakistan’s Sustainable Future | An Explainer by ADS

  • Clean Energy and Industrial Growth – A Documentary by ADS