Ever since the country’s power grid suffered major damage in 2011, getting electricity has become a priority for Syrians. The country’s Ministry of Electricity says repairs to its production and transmission capacity will cost around $2.4bn, not sums the government has readily available.
Long outages seem to have been getting longer. Even Damascus goes dark for up to 20 hours. For some, the lights never come on at all. Unable to improve supplies, Syria’s government has rationed power, while prices have risen in recent few years.
In February, the government said prices would rise between 300% and 585%. These eyewatering amounts apply to domestic, commercial, industrial, and agricultural settings. Even the tourist industry faces the hit. In March, the newspaper Qassioun estimated that each household needed at least around 3mn Syrian pounds (around $238) to cover annual electricity bills.
Sparks needed
Desperate for investment, the government is trying to privatise and liberalise its electricity sector, such as by making it easier for power produced by private companies to be sold to consumers.
Change is happening. A private company has been awarded a contract to run the Deir Ali Power Plant under a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) agreement. Late in 2023, two companies (owned by businessmen affiliated with the government) were licensed to undertake electricity projects in Damascus.
As with other privatisation schemes in Syria, foreign investment has been lacking, and domestic capital is insufficient, meaning that electricity supply is still too low. Pro-government news site Athr Press reported in February that the Syrian government was considering ending a 2021 contract with an Emirati energy company due to implementation failures.
The only foreign contracts that made progress seem to have been with Iranian companies. For instance, they repaired one of the biggest power plants in the country, in Aleppo. In addition, the new Al-Rasteen Power Plant in Lattakia was built by the Iranian company MAPNA and inaugurated in 2023.