Ministry of Energy (Pakistan) explained

Ministry of Energy
Formed:

Jurisdiction:Government of Pakistan
Headquarters:Pakistan Secretariat in Red Zone, Islamabad
Coordinates:33.7372°N 73.0934°W
Minister1 Name:Musadik Malik
Minister1 Pfo:Minister of Petroleum
Deputyminister8 Name:-->
Chief2 Name:Irfan Ali
Chief2 Position:Secretary of Petroleum
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Website:

The Ministry of Energy (Urdu: {{nq|وزارت توانائی, Trans. Wazarat-e-Tawanai, abbreviated as: MoE) is an executive ministry of the federal Government of Pakistan that is charged with implementation of the national energy policy and energy production and electricity transmission throughout the country.

The MoE functions are split in two divisions: Petroleum and Power – each independent of its tasks and objectives. The MoE oversees overall domestic hydropower generation, petroleum and energy production by means of alternative energy sources, and energy conservation.

The MoE is headed by an elected Minister of Energy who is assisted by Minister of States (as its deputies) and secretaries of each division to implement the MoE's policies and works.[1] [2]

The Ministry of Energy does not run nuclear power plants since Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission is solely responsible for such plants.

Overview

History

From 1947 until 2017, the former Ministry of Water and Power (MoWP) was charged with overseeing the energy projects and water resources management. In Pakistan, the word "Power" is used to address energy, energy conservation and production as it deals directly with the subject of electricity, which includes generation, transmission and distribution.[3]

The Ministry of Energy (MoE) was created per the recommendation from the World Bank to "help the federal government to improve coordination in power production and installation of new energy projects under the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).[4]

Power Division

See main article: Power Division (Pakistan).

Responsible for electricity generation, transmission, distribution and policy matters pertaining to these three functions. The MoE funds twenty two public sector companies and two regulatory bodies that works under the Power Division. The Power Division has its own departmental director – the Power Secretary of Pakistan.

Petroleum Division

See main article: Petroleum Division (Pakistan).

List of Ministers

Name of Minister of Water and PowerEntered officeLeft office
Raja Sikander Zaman9 March 198126 February 1985
Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali10 April 198528 January 1986
Lt. Gen. (Retd) Jamal Said Mian28 January 198620 December 1986
Qazi Abdul Majeed Abid1 February 198715 May 1988
Wazir Ahmad Jogezai15 May 198829 May 1988
Elahi Bux Soomro (Caretaker)9 June 198820 November 1988
Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari28 December 19886 August 1990
Ghulam Mustafa Khar (Caretaker) 7 August 19906 November 1990
Shahzada Muhammad Yousaf10 September 199118 July 1993
Khursheed K . Marker (Caretaker)5 August 199319 October 1993
Ghulam Mustafa Khar26 January 19945 November 1996
Abdullah J. Memon (Caretaker)5 November 199617 February 1997
Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan25 February 199711 July 1997
Raja Nadir Pervez11 July 19976 August 1998
Gohar Ayub Khan6 August 199810 October 1999
General Pervez Musharraf10 October 199923 November 2002
Aftab Ahmad Sherpao23 November 200225 August 2004
Liaquat Ali Jatoi30 June 200415 November 2007
Tariq Hameed (Caretaker)22 November 200725 March 2008
Raja Pervez Ashraf31 March 200811 February 2011
Syed Naveed Qamar5 March 20112 June 2012
Chaudhry Ahmad Mukhtar4 June 201216 March 2013
Doctor Musadik Malik (Caretaker)3 April 20134 June 2013
Khawaja Muhammad Asif (Federal Minister), Abid Sher Ali (Minister of State)7 June 201328 July 2018
Omar Ayub Khan11 September 201810 April 2022
Khurram Dastgir19 April 202210 August 2023
Awais Leghari18 March 2024incumbent

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Pakistan's new PM forms cabinet with an eye to 2018 poll. 6 August 2017. Reuters. 2017.
  2. News: DailyTimes Cabinet takes oath: Abbasi creates seven new ministries. 6 August 2017. dailytimes.com.pk. en.
  3. Web site: History . 21 July 2023.
  4. News: Pakistan PM creates new ministries . 21 July 2023 . Gulf Times . 6 August 2017 . en.