Hyderabad sits at the centre of Sindh’s commercial belt, with cotton ginning, agriculture, light industry, and a large residential base all drawing heavily on the HESCO grid. Summer temperatures regularly exceed 45°C and HESCO load shedding remains a daily reality across most residential feeders. The city receives approximately 3,100 hours of sunshine per year — among the highest in Pakistan — making solar both economically attractive and operationally essential.
HESCO net metering allows Hyderabad consumers to sell surplus generation back to the grid, effectively turning your rooftop into a credit-earning asset. For a Latifabad or Qasimabad household running heavy AC and refrigeration loads, a 10-15kW system typically takes a PKR 60,000-90,000 bill down to a small fixed service charge. Commercial sites in Saddar and on the National Highway corridor see even faster paybacks given peak-hour tariff exposure.
Solar Citizen engineers Hyderabad systems for the city’s specific conditions — marine-corridor humidity, dust from the desert side, and the high-heat operating envelope of South Sindh. We use anodized aluminium racking, IP66-rated string inverters, and panel selections chosen for low-temperature-coefficient performance. SOL AI monitoring tracks soiling, heat derating, and HESCO billing against the bidirectional meter — three of the most common Sindh-side cost leaks.
