Support independent and reliable information and inspiration
about the development of Nepal at €10, €20, €30 per month

Advertisement

WORK IN PROGRESS

  • Login
  • Register
SUBSCRIBE
NepalConnect
  • DIGEST
    • CURRENT AFFAIRS
    • DEVELOPMENT
    • DISCOVERY & TRAVEL
    • IN-DEPTH
  • FEATURES
  • LIBRARY
  • TRAVEL DESK
  • DIRECTORY
No Result
View All Result
  • DEVELOPMENT
  • CURRENT AFFAIRS
  • TRAVEL & DISCOVER
  • IN-DEPTH
NepalConnect
  • DIGEST
    • CURRENT AFFAIRS
    • DEVELOPMENT
    • DISCOVERY & TRAVEL
    • IN-DEPTH
  • FEATURES
  • LIBRARY
  • TRAVEL DESK
  • DIRECTORY
No Result
View All Result
NepalConnect
No Result
View All Result
Home UPDATE

Budget Stakes Future on Electricity

NC EditorbyNC Editor
June 16, 2026
in UPDATE
0
585
SHARES
3.2k
VIEWS

Electricity sits squarely at the heart of Nepal’s spending plan for fiscal year 2026/27, with the government pledging to bring an additional 1,040 megawatts onto the national grid over the next twelve months. The mix is telling: roughly 670 MW is slated to come from hydropower and another 370 MW from solar, a clear nod toward loosening the country’s longstanding dependence on run-of-river projects. Should the target hold, installed capacity would climb to about 5,535 MW, extending Nepal’s remarkable turnaround from the blackout years that defined daily life barely a decade ago.

The money behind the rhetoric is not trivial. Around Rs 85.54 billion (about €489 million) has been set aside for generation, transmission, and distribution, with an additional Rs 70 billion (about €400 million) ringfenced for transmission lines and substations, which have long been the system’s Achilles’ heel. The plan keeps a roster of marquee projects moving, including the 1,061 MW Upper Arun, the 670 MW Dudhkoshi reservoir scheme, and the 1,200 MW Budhi Gandaki, while greenlighting feasibility studies and tenders for a string of mid-sized plants. Most consequentially, it resurrects the perennially stalled breakup of the Nepal Electricity Authority into distinct generation, transmission-and-distribution, and trading entities, a reform pitched as the cure for a sluggish state monopoly.

A handful of debut initiatives reveal where the government hopes the sector is heading. The budget floats a 2.5 MW green hydrogen pilot in Hetauda with an eye toward commercial output, alongside a 100 MW battery storage installation for the Kathmandu Valley to blunt the evening demand spikes that generation alone cannot tame. To bankroll the expansion, officials intend to float green energy bonds and diaspora bonds, courting both climate-minded financiers and the vast Nepali workforce overseas, sweetened by perks such as letting fully funded reservoir schemes list a larger slice of shares in their first year.

Yet the grand figures bump up against an awkward truth the document itself can’t fully sidestep. Domestic appetite for power is modest, storage to bank the monsoon glut is scarce, and overseas buyers are far from guaranteed, which is why the government now wants to strip licenses from developers who signed purchase agreements but never started digging, and to roll out take-or-pay terms and dry-season pricing. Kathmandu is also widening transmission links toward India and a line in the direction of China, wagering that regional trade can soak up whatever the country fails to use itself. Generating the megawatts, in short, is the straightforward half of the equation. The riddle that has dogged planners for years remains unanswered: who, exactly, will buy all this electricity.

Previous Post

Top Diplomat Takes Kathmandu’s Balancing Act to Beijing

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECENT POST

  • Budget Stakes Future on Electricity June 16, 2026
  • Top Diplomat Takes Kathmandu’s Balancing Act to Beijing June 16, 2026
  • Pistolo Casino Bonus – App- und Mobile-Guide für deutsche Spieler June 14, 2026
  • Hike it like a local: Nepal Trekking 101 June 13, 2026

Tags

Ashad 15 Buddhism Caste Discrimination climate change Climate Change in Nepal Culture Culture in Nepal development Disaster in Nepal Economy of Nepal Elections Everest Festivals of Nepal Gen Z Protests Nepal Gen Z Revolt Gen Z Revolution Herbal Medicine Himalaya Himalayan Climate Himalayan Economy Himalayas Hinduism Humla hydropower in Nepal Mayor Balen Shah Mt Everest Mustang Nepal Nepali food Newari Culture Parvati Patan Politics Polyandry in Nepal Pride Month rice plantation in nepal sustainable tourism Sustainable travel Tibetan Culture Tourism UNESCO World Heritage Site Update wildlife Wildlife conservation Yarsagumba
Nepal Connect
SECTIONS
  • Digest
  • Features
  • Library
  • Travel Desk
  • Directory
NEPAL CONNECT
  • Mission
  • Colophon
  • Profile
  • Foundation
  • Executive organization
  • Ambassadors
  • Workshops
PARTICIPATION
  • Volunteer/ Intern
  • Research
  • Guest writer
  • Work With Us
  • Test Readers
  • Study Group
SUPPORT
  • Nepal Patrons
  • Project Support
  • Support Journalism
ACCOUNT
  • Sign Up
  • Subscribe
  • Manage My Account
  • Directory
  • Gift Subscriptions
  • Group Subscriptions
  • Gift Articles
  • Email Newsletters
  • Email Alerts
SECTIONS
  • Digest
  • Features
  • Library
  • Travel Desk
  • Directory
NEPAL CONNECT
  • About Nepal Connect
  • Mission & Vision
  • Editorial Standards
  • Team & Governance
Platform
GET INVOLVED
  • Register & Subscribe
  • Support Independent Journalism
  • Contribute Content
  • Become a Partner
Legal & contact
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • GDPR Statement
  • Cookie Policy
  • Colophon
ACCOUNT
  • Sign Up
  • Subscribe
  • Manage My Account
  • Gift Subscriptions
  • Group Subscriptions
  • Gift Articles
  • Email Newsletters
  • Email Alerts
  • Copyright @2026 Nepalconnect.world. All rights reserved.
FOLLOW US

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Sign Up with Facebook
Sign Up with Google
OR

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • DIGEST
    • DEVELOPMENT
    • CURRENT AFFAIRS
    • DISCOVERY TRAVEL
    • IN-DEPTH
  • FEATURES
  • LIBRARY
  • TRAVEL DESK
  • DIRECTORY
  • MISSION
  • COLOPHON
  • PROFILE
    • Participation
    • Support
    • Accounts
    • Advertisers
    • Contacts us
  • FOUNDATION
  • EXECUTIVE ORGANIZATION
  • AMBASSADORS
  • WORKSHOPS
  • VOLUNTEER/ INTERN
  • RESEARCH
  • GUEST WRITER
  • WORK WITH US
  • TEST READERS

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?