Pakistan’s state-owned Oil & Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) has hit a new reservoir of oil and gas at its Faakir-1 wildcat well—an onshore discovery in Sindh province that could help reverse the country’s deepening energy crisis.
Drilled to a depth of 4,185 meters, the well tested at 6.4 million cubic feet per day of gas and 55 barrels per day of condensate from the Lower Goru formation. It’s not a gusher by global standards, but it’s a critical domestic win. OGDCL called the find a “significant breakthrough” and a step forward in tapping the hydrocarbon potential of the Bitrisim block, which it operates with a 95% interest.
This comes as Pakistan stares down a widening gap between energy supply and demand, worsened by declining domestic gas production, record summer heat, and rising LNG import costs. With the country’s power grid stretched thin and foreign reserves under pressure, any indigenous hydrocarbon source is a strategic lifeline.
It’s also a rare bright spot in a high-risk environment that has long failed to attract foreign investment, despite the country’s theoretical 235 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves. A 2023 auction for new blocks saw minimal interest. Security concerns, high development costs, and a lack of infrastructure have kept most global players on the sidelines.
That may change. Pakistan recently inked a deal with Turkey to jointly explore what some surveys suggest could be the world’s fourth-largest offshore oil and gas cache, located in the Makran and Indus basins. If confirmed, it could reshape Pakistan’s economy—one in four citizens lives below the poverty line—and drastically reduce its dependence on imports.
But for now, Faakir-1 is the win Pakistan needs: a homegrown find, drilled with in-house expertise, that signals there’s still life in the onshore sector—and still untapped energy under Pakistani soil.