In 1999, Palestine Electric Company (PEC) was formed in the Palestinian territories as a subsidiary of Palestine Power Company LLC
Gaza power plant The
Gaza Power Plant is the only power plant in the Gaza Strip. It is owned by Gaza Power Generating Company (GPGC), a subsidiary of the Palestine Electric Company (PEC). It is located on
Salaheddin Road and relies on diesel fuel imported via Israel. Following the
Hamas takeover of Gaza in 2007, the
Gaza Strip has been subject to a blockade, though fuel for the Gaza power plant has been exempted in normal circumstances, as had electricity supplies. Development of the energy sector in Gaza ceased, while Gaza faced increasing demand from a growing population. During past military offensives, Israeli targets included energy infrastructure in the Gaza Strip. The Gaza power plant's main fuel tanks were hit by an Israeli tank shell in the
2014 Gaza War, setting about 3 million cubic liters of fuel on fire. Originally reported as destroyed and facing a year of repairs, the plant returned to operation in six weeks. In 2016,
Qatar provided fuel for the Gaza power plant. PA President Abbas objected to the arrangement because the PA would be unable to collect taxes on the fuel. In August 2019, following three rockets being fired from the Gaza Strip, Israel cut by half the amount of fuel it supplied to Gaza's power plant. Before the cut, residents had six hours of electricity followed by 12 hours of blackout, and it was said that the cut would result in a decrease of power time to four-hour periods. In August 2020, following the
launching of incendiary balloons from the Gaza Strip that caused brush fires in southern Israel, Israel suspended fuel shipments to the Gaza Strip, resulting in the shutting down of the Gaza power plant within a week. In September 2020,
Qatar brokered a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas that is reported to include "plans to build a power station operated by Qatar." For the 2021 year, and perhaps in earlier years, Qatar has been paying for fuel for Gaza's power plant. Transfers of fuel for the power plant were stopped by Israel during the
Gaza War in May 2021 and resumed by the end of June. Before the Gaza war that began in October 2023, the Gaza Strip's energy needs were about 600MW. The Gaza Power Plant produced 60MW and imported energy from Israel accounted for 120MW. Israel cut off power to the Strip as part of a total blockade. The Gaza Power Plant ran out of fuel days into the war and remained inactive. Energy from Israel powered a waste treatment and desalination plant in Gaza until March 2025 when
Eli Cohen, Israel's
Minister of Energy, instructed the IEC not to supply power in order to pressure Hamas. By November 2025, during a ceasefire, Gaza's energy infrastructure was badly damaged and most Palestinians were without electricity and relied on charging points running on private generators or solar power. The power plant is expected to provide around 40% of Palestine's annual electricity needs in both the West Bank and Gaza Strip, with a total annual production capacity of around 3,700 GWh. The PA has granted Palestinian Electricity Company an exclusive right to generate electricity in the Gaza Strip and sell it to PA owned or managed institutions for 20 years, which may be extended for a maximum of two consecutive five-year terms. The electricity produced in the Jenin Power Plant will be sold to PETL.
Gaza electricity crisis As of 2017, Gaza's normal energy needs were estimated to be approximately 400-600
megawatts (MW) for full 24-hour supply to all residents. Gaza's electricity is normally supplied by its sole diesel power plant, which has a nominal rating of 60-140 MW (figures vary due to degree of operation and damage to the plant) and which is reliant on crude diesel fuel, which is imported via Israel. An additional 125 MW is supplied by Israel via 10 power lines, and 27 MW is supplied by Egypt. Even in normal conditions, the current rated supply of Gaza is inadequate to meet Gaza's growing needs. The
Gaza electricity crisis is a result of the tensions between
Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, and the
Fatah-controlled Palestinian Authority, which rules in the West Bank, over custom tax revenue, funding of the Gaza Strip, and political authority. Residents of the Gaza Strip receive electricity for a few hours a day on a
rolling blackout basis. As a result of the crises the Gaza power plant has reduced and then ceased operations due to a lack of fuel, and the amount of imported electricity from Israel and Egypt has also been reduced. and by March 2024 64.8% of the solar panels installed in the Gaza Strip had been damaged by the war. A 2025 assessment of the impact of the war suggested the damage to energy infrastructure in Gaza would cost over $494 million. ==Electricity imports==