On the surface, it might seem an exaggeration to invoke the memory of the devastating 2010 floods in Pakistan when discussing the latest surge in fuel prices. But for millions of households across the country, the sense of déjà vu is unmistakable. A crisis that ought to have been foreseen and managed with caution has instead been allowed to escalate, leaving ordinary people to shoulder costs that ought to have been borne, at least in part, by the state. This is not merely about petrol costs rising. It is about how the corridors of power in Islamabad have once again misread the moment, reacted late and then shifted the burden of global shocks onto citizens who had no part in creating them.
In recent days, the government has announced a dramatic increase in the price of petrol, diesel and kerosene – a rise of about 20 percent, or Rs55 per liter on petrol and diesel – citing the upheaval in global oil markets triggered by the widening conflict involving Iran, Israel and the United States. The spark for this shock was not homegrown. The escalation of hostilities in the Middle East, pitting Western powers and their allies against Iran after a series of strikes and counter‑attacks, has disrupted one of the world’s most strategic energy routes: the Strait of Hormuz, through which nearly a fifth of the world’s oil shipments normally flow. Reports suggest that tanker traffic has effectively ground to a halt amid threats to vessels and insurance costs that have surged, pushing crude prices sharply higher. For Pakistan, almost entirely dependent on imported oil through this maritime gateway, the knock‑on effects have been swift.
Petrol stations from Karachi to Lahore have seen long queues and, according to some local media reports, even sporadic shortages at pumps as traders hoard supplies in anticipation of further upheaval. There are now fears that without quick action to diversify supply routes or significantly bolster reserves, the nation’s fragile economy could face a prolonged cycle of inflation and scarcity. Yet it is the manner in which this crisis has been handled that prompts comparison with the disastrous floods of 2010. Back then, torrential monsoon rains over weeks left a fifth of the country submerged, displacing millions, knocking out infrastructure and killing thousands.
The catastrophe revealed deep weaknesses in planning and response: a lack of early warning, slow mobilization of relief, and a political class detached from the lived reality of affected communities. More than fifteen years on, the script feels painfully familiar. Pakistan’s leaders have had years to build buffers against energy shocks, both in terms of physical stockpiles and diplomatic relationships that could have provided alternative import routes, such as overland pipelines from Central Asia or expanded purchases of Russian crude on favorable terms. These options have not been pursued with the urgency the risk warranted. Instead, when an external shock arrives, the government’s first instinct is to pass the cost on to consumers, not cushion them from it.
The current fuel price revision, unprecedented in its scale, has sparked opposition criticism, with leaders from various parties describing it as an “inflation bomb” that will deepen hardship for millions and set off cascading price rises in transport, agriculture and everyday goods. In a country where average incomes are stagnant and the cost of living has been rising for years, for many families this gasoline shock is not abstract macroeconomics but an immediate squeeze on already stretched budgets. It would be easy, and partly accurate, to blame this entirely on global forces beyond Pakistan’s control. After all, no country is immune to the ripple effects of a major geopolitical conflict.
However, the crucial distinction lies in preparedness and mitigation. India, with an economy many times larger and diversified energy partnerships, has managed similar global price volatility without descending into panic or sharply transferring costs to consumers. The difference lies not only in economic heft but in strategic foresight and pragmatic policy. Pakistan, by contrast, has appeared reactive at best. There have been some attempts at managing the situation. Government officials have emphasized that fuel reserves are adequate for the immediate future and warned against panic buying. There are discussions about weekly price reviews and even energy conservation measures, such as encouraging remote work where feasible, all aimed at dampening demand and prioritizing limited supplies.
Yet these feel like ad hoc patches rather than a coherent strategy. There is no clear, comprehensive plan that protects the most vulnerable or guarantees long‑term energy resilience. The ethical dimension of this crisis is stark. When national policy consistently shifts the cost of crises onto ordinary citizens while elites sit insulated in comfort, the social contract frays. The memories of 2010 still burn in the collective consciousness because, back then and now, too many people felt that crises were being managed for political expediency and private gain rather than public good. The floods left towns and villages in ruins because of environmental mismanagement and governance failures. The current fuel crisis reflects, on another plane, a failure to govern with strategic depth or empathy.
What is needed now is leadership that not only acknowledges the immediate hardship but acts unambiguously to protect households, small businesses and essential industries from the worst effects of this price spike. Whether that means temporary subsidies, renegotiated import agreements, or accelerated diversification of energy sources, the burden cannot fall solely on families already struggling to make ends meet. History may not repeat itself in exactly the same way it did in 2010, but patterns endure if they are not confronted. A crisis exploited is not a crisis resolved. The test for Pakistan’s policymakers now is whether they choose a different path—one that remembers past failures not as excuses for inertia but as lessons for better, more humane governance.
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