Households and industrial hubs across the country are maintaining consistent gas pressure, defying expectations of a seasonal crunch as the mercury drops. State-run utility providers report that current flow rates are meeting the projected demand, a rare stability for a sector usually plagued by mid-winter rationing.
The Petroleum Division claims that strategic reserves and prioritized supply lines to the power sector have prevented the shortages that crippled manufacturing last year. Officials say they’ve managed to secure necessary LNG cargoes ahead of schedule, insulating the grid from the immediate volatility of global spot prices.
For the average consumer, this means the morning rush for breakfast won’t be hampered by low-pressure stoves. For the industrial sector, however, the stakes remain higher. Manufacturers in textile and export-oriented zones warn that while supply is currently adequate, the cost of the fuel remains a heavy burden on their bottom lines.
“We have the gas, but the price is still forcing us to operate at reduced capacity,” a representative for a major textile association told reporters on Tuesday. He noted that while the steady flow is a relief, the high tariff structure is effectively doing the work of a shortage by curbing production.
The government maintains that its current pricing policy is the only way to keep the national utility companies solvent. By passing on the cost of imported LNG, they’ve managed to keep the infrastructure running without the massive circular debt spikes seen in previous years.
Critics argue this stability is fragile. With weather forecasts predicting a sharp cold snap next month, the real test of the supply chain is yet to come. If demand surges beyond current projections, the priority list will inevitably shift, and industrial users will likely be the first to face the cut.
For now, the taps are open, and the grid is holding. Whether that lasts through the peak of winter depends entirely on the government’s ability to keep the next round of LNG shipments on track.
