Woke up in Islamabad or Rawalpindi this morning, April 23, 2026, and found there was a little too much buzz on the local petrol stations, there was the genesis of that feeling in your stomach, that you feel sinking. The literal nerve of supplying fuel to Northern Pakistan, Attock Refinery Limited (ARL) has struck the pause button to its operations. The major question that is haunting every commuter today is; are we seeing dry pumps on Saturday?
A big refinery does not simply cease, but this is the case. Attock Refinery is not a normal plant but the main supplier of refined petrol and diesel fuel in the northern half of the nation. Once it stops breathing, the whole chain of supply in Punjab and KPK begin to experience the strangling nature almost instantly.
The Real Reason Behind the Shutdown: A Storage Nightmare
You’d think a refinery would shut down because it ran out of oil, right? Actually, it’s the exact opposite. ARL is currently bursting at the seams—not with petrol, but with furnace oil. Since power plants aren’t picking up the furnace oil as fast as they used to, the refinery’s storage tanks are full.
Think of it like a clogged sink. If the “waste” (furnace oil) has nowhere to go, you can’t keep the “tap” (production of petrol and diesel) running. According to insiders at Attock Refinery Limited (ARL), until they can clear out that backlog, they physically can’t process another drop of crude. This creates a massive chokepoint for the northern grid, which relies on ARL’s daily output to keep things moving.
OGRA’s Balancing Act: Can We Avoid the Saturday Crunch?
The Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) has been quick to issue statements to keep everyone from panicking. Their stance? “We have plenty of fuel in the country.” While that might be technically true on a national scale, the logistical reality is a bit more complicated.
Most of that “plenty” is sitting in Karachi. Moving millions of liters from the south to the north via tankers takes time—usually more time than the three-day window we have before the weekend. If ARL doesn’t resume its operations by Friday evening, the pressure on local stocks will hit a breaking point by Saturday, April 25. The Ministry of Energy has ordered oil marketing companies to prioritize the North, but as anyone who’s lived through a fuel strike knows, logistics can be a fickle beast.
A Sane Strategy for Pindi and Islamabad Residents
Look, there’s no need to go out and buy twenty jerry cans, but being a bit proactive wouldn’t hurt. Most pumps in the twin cities work on a daily supply cycle. When that cycle is disrupted, then the “Fuel Shortage in Northern Pakistan” can very soon turn into a very personal issue.
When you are going to work or a trip on the weekend, it is likely to be prudent to fill up your tank this evening. Today is better to waste ten minutes at a pump than three hours in a queue on Saturday morning.
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