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Tajikistan cuts power after a dry autumn affects hydroelectric plants

The authorities of the Central Asian nation announced this week that Tajikistan had imposed energy restrictions, including on some industrial users. This was due to low water levels in hydroelectric power plants.

According to the economy ministry, electricity users representing nearly 20% of Tajikistan GDP will be affected.

The majority of streetlights will be turned off and the power supply to public sector institutions will also be shut off after hours.

Tajikistan is the poorest successor state of the Soviet Union, with a population nearing 11 million. It faces power shortages almost every year.

A particularly warm and dry fall in Central Asia left the water levels of hydroelectric plants in that region dangerously low.

The authorities in Kyrgyzstan, a neighbouring country, have also imposed similar restrictions on energy usage. They have turned off street lights and ordered restaurants and bars to close their doors at night in Bishkek.

The reservoir of Tajikistan’s Nurek Hydroelectric Power Station (which generates 70%) is 3.5 metres (11.5 foot) below the level it was in 2024.

The Tajikistan energy ministry has stated that the country is looking to import electricity from Uzbekistan Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan.

The main mosques of the Tajik capital Dushanbe and Tashkent in Uzbekistan's capital, Uzbekistan were filled with worshipers who prayed for rain on Friday. Reporting by Felix Light, Editing by Mark Trévelyan.

(source: Reuters)