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Home EDITORIAL

Lives Lost to Keep Lights On

Editor by Editor
October 23, 2025
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As winter approaches in the Kashmir Valley, the first snowfall brings both beauty and burden. It signals the start of a season where electricity becomes the thread holding life together. In a valley where temperatures plunge and roads vanish under snow, power is not a luxury; it is survival. It warms homes, powers hospitals, fuels industries and keeps communication alive. But behind this lifeline are the linemen of the Kashmir Power Distribution Corporation Limited (KPDCL), whose courage sustains the Valley’s pulse even as their own lives hang by a thread.

There are over 500 daily wagers and permanent staff working across Kashmir, often in conditions that defy imagination. They climb poles during blizzards, navigate buried grounding wires and work through hours of outages and summer storms. As per the data available, in 2025 alone, at least 11 linemen have died since January, with electrocutions and falls claiming lives in Srinagar, Baramulla, Shopian and beyond. Over the past decade, 68 have died and 280 have been paralysed. These are not isolated tragedies but symptoms of a systemic failure.

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The absence of a mandatory Permit-to-Work protocol means linemen often climb live 11KV lines without confirmed de-energisation. Protective gear-rubber gloves, insulated belts, helmets are either inadequate or unavailable, especially for daily wagers earning Rs 500–700 per shift. Training programs, though recently expanded, reach only a fraction of the workforce. Many learn through trial and deadly error, exposed to Kashmir’s extreme weather and coordination gaps between field teams and control rooms. Ex-gratia payments of Rs 5-10 lakhs offer little comfort to grieving families. Insurance schemes exclude most casual workers. Promises of regularisation remain unresolved and rehabilitation support exists more in rhetoric than reality.

KPDCL’s recent gear distributions and training sessions are welcome, but they address symptoms, not root causes. The infrastructure is almost outdated, operations overburdened and safety protocols dangerously lax. The stakes are immense. These linemen power the institutions that anchor Kashmir’s future as they exist in every sector. Neglecting their safety undermines public trust and hampers development at a time when reliable power is vital for investment and growth.

The path forward demands urgent reform. Permit-to-Work protocols must be implemented universally before snowfall, with digital verification ensuring no line carries live current during repairs. Every crew member must be equipped with certified personal protective equipment, tracked through biometric systems to prevent pilferage. Permanent training academies must certify all linemen in safety protocols, first aid and terrain-specific techniques within six months. Financial security must match these measures. A dedicated welfare fund should be provided be it insurance coverage per worker, survivor pensions and mandatory regularisation as early as possible, linked to safety compliance. Technology too must be deployed proactively that includes drone surveillance for high-risk areas.

Meanwhile, the Electrical Inspectorate must enforce Central Electricity Authority regulations with zero tolerance for violations. Half-measures will claim more lives; comprehensive reform will save them. Kashmir cannot build its future on the graves of those who power it. Valley’s linemen deserve more than condolences; they require the tools, training and commitment that match their courage. The current crisis presents not just a moral imperative, but a strategic opportunity to modernise J&K’s power sector while honouring its workforce. Delay invites further tragedy; action illuminates the way forward.

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