Thursday, May 21st, 2026

Energy Ministry calls for applications to fill vacant Electricity Regulatory Commission posts



KATHMANDU: The Ministry of Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation has called for applications to fill vacant positions at the Electricity Regulatory Commission.

Issuing a notice on Thursday, the ministry invited applications for one chairperson and four member positions through open competition.

According to the ministry, among the four member posts, one position has been reserved for women.

The selection process has been initiated under Section 5 of the Electricity Regulatory Commission Act, 2074 BS. Applicants must meet the minimum educational qualifications and experience as specified in the law.

Interested candidates have been asked to submit their applications within 15 days from the date of publication of the notice at the Development Aid and Technical Coordination Division under the ministry.

Earlier, the commission became vacant after the chairperson and all four members were automatically relieved of their posts under the “Special Provision on Removal of Public Office Holders Ordinance, 2026,” leaving the regulatory body without leadership. The government has now moved forward with the process to appoint new officials.

Publish Date : 21 May 2026 18:10 PM

Immigration Department launches ‘Digital Time Card’ to improve service delivery

KATHMANDU: The Department of Immigration has introduced a new “Digital

Energy Ministry calls for applications to fill vacant Electricity Regulatory Commission posts

KATHMANDU: The Ministry of Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation has

HoR: Lawmakers draw govt attention to road safety, disaster preparedness

KATHMANDU: In today’s meeting of the House of Representatives, lawmakers

Judicial Council Secretariat removes Justice Malla’s name, photo from senior-most justice section

KATHMANDU: The Judicial Council Secretariat has removed the name and

Auditor General flags billions in possible tax evasion on imported EVs from China

KATHMANDU: The Office of the Auditor General has pointed to