Pakistan issues new gas connections for domestic consumers after years-long ban

Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif speaks during an event in Islamabad on October 24, 2025. (Handout/PMO/File)
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  • Pakistan banned new connections for domestic consumers in 2021 citing depleting gas reserves
  • Ban forced users to switch from piped gas to more expensive and alternative sources of fuel

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif formally launched the process to supply Regasified Liquefied Natural Gas (RLNG) connections for domestic consumers across Pakistan on Sunday, saying Islamabad had fulfilled a years-long demand of the people by doing so.

Pakistan’s government banned new gas connections in 2021, citing rapidly depleting gas reserves in the country. This forced users to switch from piped gas to other alternative sources of fuel for cooking and heating purposes, such as Liquefied Petroleum Gas, (LPG), which is more expensive.

Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik announced in September that the government had decided to issue new gas connections at the “strong insistence” of the masses.

“Today, that day has finally arrived, Alhamdulillah, that we are now issuing gas, which is very high-quality fuel, for household consumers across Pakistan,” Sharif said at a ceremony held to mark the event in Islamabad.

“There are hundreds of thousands of applications already, so I believe this is a day of great joy.”

Malik had said last month that the government was mindful of the fact that RLNG, which is imported gas, is more expensive than local gas. However, the petroleum minister said it was still 30-35 percent cheaper than LPG.

The development takes place after the Pakistan Petroleum Limited (PPL), one of the country’s leading oil and gas exploration and production companies, announced it had discovered “significant” oil and gas reserves in the eastern Attock district last month.

Earlier in February, Mari Energies, a Pakistani hydrocarbon exploration firm, discovered new oil and gas reserves in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, with initial tests suggesting a flow of 12.96 million standard cubic feet per day (MMSCFD) of gas and around 20 barrel per day (bbl/d) of condensate.