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NEA dismisses possibility of load shedding, commits to sustainable long
May 16, 2025

NEA dismisses possibility of load shedding, commits to sustainable long

Kathmndu: Managing Director of the Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA), Hitendra Dev Shakya, has assured the public that the country will not experience a return to load shedding, despite a significant power outage that occurred on Thursday evening, affecting large areas nationwide.

Addressing a press conference held to provide clarification on the incident, Shakya stated that the disruption in electricity supply was caused by technical issues triggered by adverse weather conditions. He firmly dismissed circulating rumors suggesting the reintroduction of scheduled power cuts, reaffirming NEA’s commitment to maintaining a stable and reliable power supply across the country.
On Thursday evening at 6:38 PM, electricity supply was disrupted across much of the country.According to NEA, both circuits of the Dhalkebar-Muzaffarpur 400 kV double circuit transmission line were affected simultaneously due to a storm in the Dhalkebar area.

“Electricity demand is highest in the evening, but due to low domestic production and line tripping, the system becomes unstable,” NEA explained.Shakya refuted rumors circulating on social media about the return of load shedding. “The claims that load shedding has returned, and we are going back to the days of inverters and candles, are false,” he said. “A tree branch falling on the line caused the issue, which was resolved within about two hours.”

Shakya said that he personally went to the Electricity System Operation Department in Syuchatar to monitor the situation after the outage occurred.He informed that circuit-2 of the Dhalkebar-Muzaffarpur line resumed operation at 8:08 PM, restoring a smooth power supply.

However, he acknowledged that not all areas received electricity immediately, as trees had fallen on 132 kV, 33 kV, and 11 kV lines in the Dhalkebar West area, damaging poles and conductors.To prevent similar problems in the future, Shakya said that the NEA will develop immediate, medium-term, and long-term strategies.

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