United States and WAPDA Sign Agreement to Rehabilitate Mangla Dam

Energy sector Pakistan
Mission Director Pakistan shaking hands with WAPDA Chairman
USAID Pakistan

For Immediate Release

Friday, March 7, 2014
Today the United States and Pakistan signed a $72 million project implementation agreement to refurbish and upgrade the Mangla dam located in the Mirpur district of Azad Kashmir.  The rehabilitation will improve the operating capacity of the hydroelectric plant at Mangala dam by 90 megawatts (MW), enough electricity for about 200,000 Pakistani households.  A total amount of $150 million is slated for the project, with $72 million allotted for this initial phase.
 
USAID Mission Director Gregory Gottlieb and the chairman of Pakistan's Water and Power Development Authority (WAPDA), Syed Raghib Abbas Shah signed the agreement this evening at the offices of Advanced Engineering Associates International (AEAI), the project's implementing partner.
 
"The work at Mangla builds upon efforts begun by the U.S. in the 1960s, when the U.S. government funded the construction of Mangla dam.  The United States understands that Pakistan is facing an energy crisis and we are committed to doing our part to alleviate it," Gottlieb said.
 
Under the agreement, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) will fund the refurbishment of two generators and the modernization of ancillary equipment of the power house at the dam. The new equipment will improve the reliability and efficacy of the Mangla dam for the next 40 years.
 
"WAPDA has also initiated an upgrade of the Mangla power house to enhance its generation capacity from the existing 1000 MW to 1310 MW," said WAPDA Chairman Raghib Shah.  According to Shah, the project is part of the Federal Government's strategy to add low-cost electricity to the national grid to mitigate power shortages in the country.
 
The funding of the Mangla dam rehabilitation is one element of a comprehensive U.S. energy assistance program in Pakistan, which includes renovating the power plant at the Tarbela Dam, upgrading the Guddu, Jamshoro, and Muzaffargarh thermal power plants, and completing the construction of Satpara and Gomal Zam dams.  In total, United States energy programs have added 1088 MW to Pakistan's electrical power systems benefiting over 11 million Pakistanis.