The staggering revelation of unpaid electricity dues across government departments and institutions in Jammu and Kashmir is not just a fiscal anomaly; it is symptomatic of a deeper malaise that has crippled the power sector for decades. At a time when citizens endure long hours of darkness in winter and erratic supply in summer, the fact that government agencies themselves are the largest defaulters exposes a culture of indifference and lack of accountability. Power is not a luxury; it is the backbone of modern life, and the failure to manage it responsibly has left ordinary people paying the price for institutional negligence.
Every winter, Kashmir is plunged into a crisis of electricity. Demand surges as households rely on heating, hospitals struggle to maintain critical services, and students attempt to study under dim bulbs. Yet supply remains woefully inadequate. The irony is glaring: Kashmir is blessed with abundant water resources, rivers that could generate enough hydroelectric power to meet regional needs and even export surplus. Instead, projects remain underutilized, delayed, or mismanaged, forcing the state to import electricity at high costs. The summer months bring their own challenges; irrigation systems, water supply schemes, and cooling requirements all depend on steady electricity, but the cycle of defaults ensures that shortages persist, leaving farmers, businesses, and households equally vulnerable.
The list of defaulters reads like a roll call of essential institutions. Public Health Engineering department, irrigation and flood control, housing and urban development, even security agencies; all owe massive sums. These are not marginal players; they are pillars of infrastructure, safety, and governance. Their failure to clear dues undermines the financial health of power distribution companies, which in turn limits investment in infrastructure, modernization, and generation capacity. The result is a vicious cycle: departments consume power without responsibility, distribution companies struggle to recover costs, and citizens are penalized with inflated tariffs and relentless load-shedding. Accountability is conspicuously absent, and the double standard is glaring;while ordinary consumers face disconnection for minor delays, government departments continue to default with impunity.
The clearance of dues must be treated as an urgent priority, as its not merely a matter of balancing accounts; it is about restoring credibility and ensuring that the power sector can function effectively. Departments must be compelled to clear arrears within strict timelines, with penalties for continued defaults. A transparent mechanism should be instituted to monitor consumption, enforce timely payments and prevent future liabilities from spiraling out of control.
Equally critical is the need for a long-term vision for power generation as Kashmir’s rivers are its greatest natural asset, yet hydroelectric projects remain stalled or underperforming. Harnessing water resources effectively could transform the energy landscape, ensure self-sufficiency and reduce dependence on external supply. Investment in renewable energy, coupled with modernization of distribution networks, is essential to break the cycle of shortages. But these plans must be backed by political will and administrative accountability, not just lofty announcements that fade into inertia.
The suffering of people cannot be dismissed as collateral damage of bureaucratic inefficiency. Every blackout in winter, every disruption in summer, is a reminder of the gap between promises and delivery. Families are forced to rely on costly alternatives, students lose precious study hours, and businesses face losses due to unreliable supply. The human cost of this crisis is immense, and it is borne disproportionately by those who have no power to influence policy. The government must act decisively; recover dues, enforce accountability, and invest in generation. The future of Kashmir’s power sector depends not on rhetoric but on concrete action.
