Nepal’s energy sector is once again under public scrutiny following a series of power cuts in major urban centers—even during high-level events attended by energy officials. For a country that claims surplus energy production and increasing electricity exports, the continued issue of “flickering lights” is casting doubt on system reliability. This has implications not just for daily life—but also for investors in hydropower stocks.
A Dark Moment During a Bright Presentation
On Shrawan 1 (July 16, 2025), Energy Minister Deepak Khadka faced an ironic disruption during a press meet celebrating his one-year term—the power went out mid-presentation. The event, hosted at Everest Hotel by the Department of Electricity Development, was plunged into darkness for several minutes, with attendees forced to use mobile flashlights. The timing couldn’t have been worse.
Minister Khadka had just highlighted progress, noting Nepal’s total installed capacity has reached 3,878 MW, with 631 MW added in the past year. He claimed Nepal exports more than 800 MW of electricity daily to India and Bangladesh.
Investors Question: “If We Export Power, Why Do Lights Still Go Off?”
Despite this growth narrative, consumers and investors alike are increasingly skeptical. Power “tripping” and blackouts have disrupted events, meetings, and even political party gatherings in the capital. For investors considering hydropower stocks or energy infrastructure companies on NEPSE, these issues raise red flags about:
- Grid reliability
- Maintenance practices
- Risk to industries relying on consistent power
- Cost of backup systems like inverters for businesses
This becomes especially relevant when hydropower stocks are a major segment of the Nepal Stock Exchange (NEPSE) and influence index movements and sectoral sentiment.
Load-Shedding or Line Issue? Definitions Matter for Investors
Minister Khadka dismissed the outages as “not load-shedding” but rather technical failures due to overloaded or outdated transmission lines, asserting that “selling electricity in monsoon and importing in winter is a balancing act, not a failure.”
Still, the perception problem persists. For businesses that must invest in inverters or backup systems, operational costs increase—impacting their margins, particularly in manufacturing, ICT, hospitality, and financial sectors.
Power Supply Instability Could Affect Corporate Earnings
Several companies listed on NEPSE—including manufacturing units, banks with large data centers, and service industries—are now reportedly facing productivity loss due to intermittent power supply. If this trend continues, it may reflect in their upcoming quarterly earnings and influence stock valuations.
NEA Claims “Progress is Underway”—But Markets Want Proof
Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) and its executives claim they are addressing the issue:
- Monitoring transmission quality using global indicators like SAIFI and SAIDI
- Assigning dedicated relay and protection engineers to sub-stations
- Modernizing switching and distribution control centers in the Kathmandu Valley
However, markets are not driven by promises alone—they respond to performance. Unless investors see visible improvement in service reliability, energy and utility stocks may face increased volatility due to shaken confidence.
