Inquiries over failure The energy produced by Nandipur was extremely expensive, at Rs. 42 per unit, and the project was shut down after five days of operation. It was revealed after the audit that: • The position of managing director was created by the chief minister of Punjab as his personal choice, while no such position was included in the original provision. • A grade 19 officer of Parks Horticulture Authority (PHA), Cap. (R) Muhammad Mehmood, was appointed as managing director with a high salary, without any professional experience applicable to the post. • The managing director commissioned a low-capacity furnace oil treatment plant (FOTP) without consulting technical staff and engineers at the plant. This resulted in total collapse of the furnace-operated plant. • The initial startup of the plant was done with the wrong choice of fuel, damaging the plant and requiring invocation of the O&M contract. • To cover up mistakes, wrong contracts were awarded for O&M to incompetent firms on a long-term basis, resulting finally in the cessation of the project.
Administrative changes Since the inauguration of the project, the plant became the highlight of media criticism and opposition parties have raised questions around it, causing political damage to the government. After the revelation of an audit report and inquiry outcomes in October 2015,
Nawaz Sharif took immediate action and changed the administration of the project. The control of the project was handed over from the government of Punjab the
Ministry of Water and Power, and controversial managing director Cap. (R) Muhammad Mehmood was replaced by Tariq Bhatti. Shahzad Akbar was appointed project director. Minister of water and power Khawaja Asif publicly admitted the failure of the project due to administrative lapses and mismanagement.
Conflicts with NEPRA The energy produced by the plant was extremely expensive, at Rs. 42 per unit, with less than 40% efficiency; however, NEPRA fixed the cost in April 2015 to Rs 11.63 per unit. The government appealed to increase this cost to Rs. 15.63 per unit, demanding a total of Rs. 23 billion to be recovered from consumers. The Ministry of Water and Power pleaded that the plant would go bankrupt with annual losses and production costs being much higher than the tariffs. NEPRA heard the appeal on 29 January 2016 and rejected it, declining to pass any further financial burdens to the consumer. After NEPRA refused to increase tariffs in a second review, NEPRA referred to the already presented report citing inefficiency of the plant and once again refused to pass any additional fuel costs and inefficiencies to the consumer. The annual losses and high production costs resulted in the closure of the plant in June 2016. NEPRA raised question marks over the loss of billions of rupees against closure of the plant after June 2016 . To understand the scale of problem, the
National Transmission & Dispatch Company (NTDC) reported that Nandipur was incurring losses beyond recovery including interests on loans taken for commissioning, and interests on loans taken each month due to operational cost overruns. For example, in June 2016, the plant incurred Rs. 4.46 billion in losses to national the exchequer, generating costly electricity and not recovering its generation cost. Another conflict surfaced in February 2017, when Hydro Electric Power System Engineering Company (HEPSEC) of China was awarded an O&M contract on 85
paisa per unit, 80% higher than the permitted rate of 48 paisa per unit by NEPRA. The permitted rate on planned gas conversion at the plant was even less, at 34 paisa per unit.
Conversion to regasified liquefied natural gas (RLNG) Even after becoming operational, the Nandipur Power Project produced unsustainable levels of per-unit power, with average capacity of around 40% utilisation. Federal Secretary of the Ministry of Water and Power Mohammad Younus Dagha admitted that a gas-fired plant in Punjab, which suffered gas shortages in 2008, was a bad idea in the first place, and running it with regular losses was adding further insult to injury. He suggested that with adequate
LNG available, it should be converted to gas. In late 2016, the Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) finally approved a loan of Rs 30.6 bn to convert Nandipur to gas operation. On 23 April 2017, Nandipur started a 525 MW test run on regasified liquefied natural gas (RLNG) with per day of gas supply from Sui Northern Gas Pipelines limited (SNGPL). However, even after the conversion, the plant was unable to sustain a financial balance between generation cost and recovery from its production. For example, in April 2018, Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited (SNGPL) disconnected gas supply to the plant for defaulting on dues of approximately Rs. 900 million. Along with conversion to RLNG, an operation and maintenance (O&M) contract was signed for 10 years between Northern Power Generation Company Limited (NPGCL) and the Hydro Electric Power System Engineering Company (HEPSEC) of China. Despite its production costs and other scandals, the plant produced 460 MW - 480 MW with its four turbines operating on gas and another one on steam before its one-month scheduled closure on 6 March 2018. ==Scams, scandals, and probe==