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The Power Division has reported an improvement in electricity supply across the country since April 17, according to its spokesperson.

He said that increased water releases from dams, carried out in line with provincial demand, have boosted hydropower generation to around 5,000 megawatts during peak evening and night hours. This additional output, combined with about 400 megawatts of extra supply from the southern region, has contributed to greater stability in the national grid and helped improve electricity availability in central areas.

The spokesperson added that no load management was carried out during peak night hours on April 17, 18, and 19. On April 20, most distribution companies restricted load management to just one hour during peak demand periods, while only Genco and SEPCO implemented outages of up to two hours.

He further stated that LNG-based power plants with a combined capacity of approximately 5,500 megawatts are currently not producing electricity due to fuel shortages. He said generation from these plants will resume once LNG supply becomes available again.

The Power Division also clarified that load management linked to electricity theft and system losses will continue across distribution companies. It stressed that this type of load management is part of routine operational policy and is separate from peak-hour demand management. The policy, it added, will remain in effect even after LNG supplies are restored.

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