DUSHANBE: Kyrgyzs­tan and Tajikistan are facing an energy crisis as water levels have plummeted at the reservoirs powering their largest hydropower stations, officials said this week.

The two landlocked Cen­tral Asian countries are heavily reliant on hydropower. Both use massive Soviet-built hydro­power plants for their domestic electricity output.

The water level in the reservoir connected to Tajikistan’s Nurek power plant has dropped by 2.47 metres (8.1 feet) over the last year, the state utility firm said on Friday.

The Tajik Ministry of Energy and Water Resources had said on Thursday that the situation there was alarming.

In neighbouring Kyrgyzstan, the reservoir feeding Toktogul hydroelectric plant has lost two billion cubic metres (70.6 billion cubic feet) — around 20 percent — over the past year, President Sadyr Japarov said earlier this week.

Restaurants in Kyrgyzstan have been ordered since Thursday to close at 10 pm, and public establishments must switch off lights by 6pm to save power.

Tajik authorities said officials who failed to stop an “irrational” use of electricity would be fired.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, both countries have experienced periodic power cuts, especially in winter, despite attempts to renovate ailing energy infrastructure.

Published in Dawn, November 15th, 2025

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