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Pakistan’s Solar Capacity Reaches 51 GW as Distributed Solar Reshapes Electricity Landscape

A report from Renewables First indicates that Pakistan’s adoption of solar energy continues to expand, with households, farms, and businesses turning to distributed solar to reduce dependence on the national grid. According to the think tank’s latest edition of its flagship report, Pakistan Electricity Review 2026, the country had deployed an estimated 51 GW of solar capacity as of March 2026, while solar module imports reached 54 GW by the end of that same month. The report finds that electrification is accelerating through distributed solar installations, even as grid-based indicators show stagnation. Electricity generated by utility-scale sources reached 135 TWh in fiscal year 2025 (July 2024 to June 2025), a 2% year-on-year decline and the fourth consecutive drop from a peak of 154 TWh in fiscal year 2022. Distributed solar—including net-metering, behind-the-meter, and off-grid systems—generated 51 TWh in FY25, pushing Pakistan’s total electricity generation to a record 186 TWh. The report states that this 51 TWh is equivalent to roughly 46% of grid-supplied electricity over the same period. During a webinar launching the report, Renewables First Associate – Energy Insights, Nabiya Imran, explained that new growth in electricity is increasingly met by distributed solar outside the grid. She noted that demand that was once entirely on the grid has migrated to behind-the-meter and net-metered distributed solar. The report adds that grid sales—electricity purchased by consumers from the state-owned central utility network—reached 111 TWh in FY25, a 1.7% increase year-on-year but below the FY22 peak. It clarifies that this does not reflect falling electricity demand, but rather that a growing share of consumption is met through distributed solar, with underlying electricity use continuing to rise while bypassing the grid. Imran described two parallel systems currently operating in Pakistan: the centralized grid structured around unidirectional power flows and thermal dependence, and consumers investing in distributed solar driven by high electricity tariffs and cheaper solar panel costs. She said there is a mismatch between these systems, and bridging it would help reduce fossil fuel dependence and improve macroeconomic resilience. Imran also noted that clean technologies such as solar, batteries, and electric vehicles present an opportunity to localize manufacturing, supporting broader economic development. In the report’s foreword, Sohaib Malik, Senior Fellow – Energy Transitions at Renewables First, wrote that while policymakers are beginning to recognize challenges facing the centralized model, most stakeholders do not yet fully appreciate the shift due to incomplete and imprecise datasets. The report warns that distributed solar is eroding utility revenues faster than thermal capacity can be rationalized, moving the sector toward an inflection point without sufficient policy frameworks. It states that the inflection point will depend on how quickly planning and policy adapt to decentralized, bi-directional electricity flows, and that a shift from capacity expansion to system optimization—including flexibility, storage, and demand-side management—will be critical to improving efficiency and reducing costs.

Source: https://www.indexbox.io/blog/pakistans-solar-capacity-reaches-51-gw-as-distributed-solar-reshapes-electricity-landscape/

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