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Decarbonisation Dynamism & Diligent Directives Drive Pakistan’s Steel Sector Surge

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Economic Engine & Emissions Exposition

Pakistan’s steel sector is no small player, it contributes almost 2 % to GDP, produces around 8.4 million metric tons of steel annually, and employs about 200,000 people. Yet this economic behemoth consumes roughly 2.9 gigajoules per ton, with over 80 % of its energy sourced from grid electricity, fueling escalated tariffs and rising emissions. This underscores an urgent need for industrial efficiency not just for environmental reasons, but for economic survival

 

Intensity Indicators & Inflation Inference

Pakistan’s energy intensity, 4.2 MJ per $1 GDP, is starkly higher than in Bangladesh (1.9 MJ) and Sri Lanka (1.7 MJ), highlighting a substantial margin for performance enhancements. Amid soaring energy rates, electricity prices have doubled while gas rates quintupled, steel plants suffer shrinking profit margins, with utilisation dropping below 40 % in some cases .

 

Carbon Footprint & Climate Clout

The World Bank estimates annual steel sector emissions at around 1.9 million metric tons of CO₂, about 2 % of total industrial emissions . Pakistan’s carbon intensity stands at 55 gCO₂/MJ, 38 % higher than North America and 50 % higher than the EU, illuminating inefficiencies and dependence on fossil-based electricity.

 

Policy Pressures & Global Imperatives

At a recent SDPI–Denmark–World Bank event, experts warned that without decarbonisation, Pakistan risks heavy penalties under the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, reaching €90,000 per 100 metric tons of steel. World Bank energy specialist Waqas Idrees emphasized that "energy efficiency and decarbonisation are essential for future trade competitiveness".

 

Efficiency Enhancements & Technological Trajectories

The World Bank outlines practical efficiency gains: waste heat recovery, high-efficiency motors, variable frequency drives, and electrified induction furnaces, some slashing energy use and emissions by double digits. Advanced options, organic Rankine cycles and hydrogen-based direct reduction, promise emission reductions up to 60 %.

 

Barriers & Capacity Constraints

Despite feasibility, the uptake is slow. The sector lacks centralized energy monitoring, awareness of clean technology, and technical capacity, especially among informal units. Policy and incentive fragmentation, limited access to finance, and smuggling of cheap steel impose further obstacles.

 

Strategic Solutions & Stakeholder Synergy

Key recommendations from the World Bank include: forming energy-efficiency units within firms; conducting regular technical training; centralizing emissions reporting; increasing transparency in data; and introducing green financing tailored for industry-scale interventions . International partnerships, like those with Denmark and the World Bank, can support pilot projects and technical knowledge transfer .

 

Renewable Integration & Resilience Realisation

Pakistan has added 13 GW of solar capacity in 2024 alone and targets over 60 % clean electricity by 2030. This clean power surge offers a pathway to decarbonise steel by directly integrating renewables and exploring green hydrogen for process heat, a synergy promising both energy resilience and emissions reduction.

 

4. Key Takeaways:

  • Pakistan’s steel plants emit ~1.9 million metric tons of CO₂/year and consume ~2.9 GJ per ton, with over 80 % grid electricity use.

  • Deploying technologies like waste heat recovery, efficient motors, furnace controls, EAFs, and hydrogen-based processes could reduce emissions by up to 60 %.

  • Addressing barriers, high tariffs, limited awareness, fragmented policy, and financing gaps, through capacity building, data transparency, green finance, and international collaboration is crucial.

Decarbonisation Dynamism & Diligent Directives Drive Pakistan’s Steel Sector Surge

By:

Nishith

शनिवार, 28 जून 2025

Synopsis: - Drawing on the World Bank’s Pakistan Sustainable Energy Series, this article examines opportunities for energy efficiency and decarbonisation in Pakistan’s steel sector, detailing technologies, policy reforms, and collaborations needed to reduce CO₂ emissions, cut costs, and enhance global competitiveness.

Image Source : Content Factory

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