ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Textile Council (PTC) has urged the Prime Minister Office (PMO) to remove cross subsidies and end to peak/off peak electricity use regime to rescue exports.
In a formal letter addressed to Dr Syed Tauqir Hussain Shah, Adviser to the Prime Minister, PTC has explicitly requested the removal of cross-subsidies embedded in industrial electricity tariffs, warning that without urgent correction of power pricing distortions, Pakistan’s export competitiveness — particularly in textiles — will continue to deteriorate.
The Council emphasized that industrial power tariffs currently carry a substantial cross-subsidy burden, significantly inflating production costs for export-oriented manufacturers and placing Pakistan at a disadvantage against regional competitors.
READ MORE: PTC says high costs eroding textile sector competitiveness
And urged that the cross subsidy cost to the tune of PKR 160 billion (XDISCOs and KE) embedded in Industrial electricity tariff be removed, noting that such a reform would allow charging of actual electricity price to industry, enhance grid utilization, and reduce incentives for industries to move off-grid.
The letter also raised serious concerns over the blanket application of the Time-of-Use (ToU) tariff regime with different rates for peak hours and off peak hours for industries operating on a three-shift basis. According to PTC, exporters providing stable base-load demand are being penalized through peak-hour charges, forcing production cuts or the absorption of unsustainable cost increases. With incremental tariff regimes already in place, the Council argued that the rigid ToU framework has lost its economic rationale after and requires an urgent review.
Warning of an escalating crisis, the PTC noted that Pakistan’s textile and apparel exports declined across all major product categories and key markets — including the EU, the United States, and the United Kingdom — during the first half of FY 2025–26. Terming the situation an “export emergency,” the Council cautioned that rising regional competition and impending trade agreements by neighbouring countries could further weaken Pakistan’s export base unless decisive, time-bound government intervention is undertaken.
The PTC concluded that Pakistan’s textile sector retains the capacity, workforce, and international market linkages to drive export-led recovery, but stressed that this potential can only be realized through immediate policy reforms that ensure a predictable, rational, and cost-competitive energy regime.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2026





















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