Tajikistan sold more than US$17.1 million worth of electricity to neighboring countries in September

According to data from the Agency for Statistics under the President of Tajikistan, Tajikistan last month exported more than 17.1 million US dollars’ worth of electricity.   Over the first eight months of this year, Tajikistan has reportedly supplied about 100 million US dollars’ worth of electricity power to neighboring countries, which is 11.5 percent more […]

According to data from the Agency for Statistics under the President of Tajikistan, Tajikistan last month exported more than 17.1 million US dollars’ worth of electricity.  

Over the first eight months of this year, Tajikistan has reportedly supplied about 100 million US dollars’ worth of electricity power to neighboring countries, which is 11.5 percent more than in the same period last year.  

Recall, Tajikistan has exported US$64.5 million worth of electricity in January-July, which is 17.2 percent more than in the same period last year. 

Tajikistan now supplies electricity to Uzbekistan and northern provinces of Afghanistan within the framework of contracts concluded with power utility companies of these countries.

Tajikistan reportedly supplies electricity to Afghanistan at the rate of 4.67 cents per 1 kWh.

Barqi Tojik (Tajikistan’s national power utility company) and its Afghan analog, Da Afghanistan Breshna Sherkat (DABS), signed an updated electricity supply deal worth US$69 million in December on the supply of 400 megawatt-hours of electricity daily in May-September and 25-30 megawatt-hours of electricity daily in October-April.

If that arrangement is executed as agreed, Tajikistan will provide Afghanistan with 1.5 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity this year.  That is more than the 1.2 billion kilowatt-hours that Dushanbe says it delivered last year.

As fa as Uzbekistan is concerned, Tajikistan supplies electric power to this country at the rate of 2.00 cents per 1 kWh.

The low price for electricity supplied to Uzbekistan is due to the fact that Tajikistan, in turn, receives natural gas from Uzbekistan at a reduced price.

In accordance with the reached agreements, Tajikistan reportedly supplies electricity to the neighboring countries (Afghanistan and Uzbekistan) only during the April-October period. 

Tajikistan has sufficient summer-time (defined as May 1 to September 30) hydropower surpluses to export to the neighboring countries.

Meanwhile, residential customers in rural areas of Tajikistan have been faced with restricted electricity supplies since late September.     

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