What's new

Energy Projects...Updates

The CDWP approved two projects related to the energy sector. It endorsed a 500-kilovolt electricity sub-station project worth Rs7.2 billion.



The objective of the project is the conversion of a 500kv switching station at Moro to meet the growing power requirement of Sukkur Electric Power Company (Sepco) including a 132kv grid station at Kandiaro and Naushehro Feroze in the jurisdiction of Sepco.
 
KARACHI: K-Electric has announced via notification to Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) that the Board of Directors of the company has approved award of EPC contract(s) to Siemens-Harbin consortium to establish 900 MW Combined Cycle Power Plant at Bin Qasim.

The estimated contract value would be around $425 million. The project will be executed on fast track and additional power will be available in summer 2021. Moreover, the plant would run through re-gasified liquefied natural gas (RLNG).

This project will positively contribute to bridge electricity demand-supply deficit in KE service area, the notification read.
 
102 MW GHPP. GULPUR HYDRO POWER PROJECT. Kotli, AzadKashmir. Unit 2 is complete and starts commissioning. Unit 1 is 80% complete. Water pounding is done successfully.


71334364_2259475540846798_576976586465607680_n.jpg
 
In Pakistan, shift away from furnace oil saves consumers Rs65b

October 9, 2019
https://tribune.com.pk/story/2075174/2-pakistan-shift-away-furnace-oil-saves-consumers-rs65b/
2075174-download-1570591123-434-640x480.jpg

PHOTO: REUTERS

KARACHI: The shift to imported gas (re-gasified liquefied natural gas or RLNG) and coal-fired power plants from furnace oil saved end-consumers nearly Rs65 billion in the fiscal year ended June 30, 2018.

“A benefit of around Rs65 billion was passed on to end-consumers on account of fuel price adjustment,” said the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (Nepra) in its Annual Report 2017-18 issued recently.

The benefit was enjoyed by the end-consumers except for those having consumption of up to 300 units per month and agricultural consumers.

The relief was given partly on account of power purchase price (PPP), including the impact of transmission and distribution (T&D) losses, and partly on account of fuel cost adjustment (FCA) and prior year adjustment (PYA) pertaining to financial year 2016-17.

The government has added over 5,000 megawatts of installed capacity based on RLNG and coal to the system and phased out around 4,000MW of capacity based on furnace oil over the past couple of years till June 30, 2018.

Most of the new plants on imported fuels came under the multibillion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) initiated under the previous government of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

The cost of power production with RLNG as fuel remained slightly lower or equivalent to production from furnace oil. The cost of coal-fired power generation, however, was much lower than furnace oil and local gas-fired electricity production.

The addition of RLNG and coal-based power supply has helped phase out furnace oil-fired production as the installed capacity of transmission and distribution system remained stagnant prior to the addition of new supplies.

Pakistan had an installed power generation capacity of 32,519MW on June 30, 2018. Of that, 64% (20,800MW) of the total capacity was based on furnace oil, 27% (8,683MW) on hydel resources, 4% (1,345MW) on nuclear, 3% (985MW) on wind, slightly over 1% (400MW) on solar and slightly less than 1% (306MW) on bagasse.

Nepra reported that power companies received 3,036 complaints and 95% of them were addressed during the year ended June 30, 2018.

The regulatory authority has time and again raised questions over the number of complaints reported by the power firms. It believes the number has been higher than the one reported.
 
ISLAMABAD: China will help Pakistan turn Thar coal into diesel and to this effect, the Pakistan authorities managed to contact Chinese Shenhua Ningxia Coal Industry Group, which is known for turning coal into liquid.

The Shenhua Ningxia Coal Industry Group, a subsidiary of China’s biggest coal producer, the Shenhua Group, has already successfully installed the project to convert coal into oil in the northwestern Chinese region of Ningxia, the biggest plant of its kind in the world.

The coal-to-liquid (CTL) project, which has an annual production capacity of 4 million tons of oil, was built by the Shenhua Ningxia Coal Industry Group, a subsidiary of China’s biggest coal producer, the Shenhua Group.

“We have held preliminary meeting with the management of the said company and more talks will also be held for reaching a win-win agreement and this very important development took place when Prime Minister Imran Khan visited China on October 8 and being a member in his delegation managed to have meeting with top management of the said Chinese company Shenua-Ningxia, which has the expertise to turn coal into liquid (synthetic diesel). And if the said company comes and installs the Coal-to-Liquid (CoT) plant in Thar and starts turning the coal into diesel, it will prove not less than a game changer as there are huge coal deposits in Thar,” Adviser to Prime Minister on Petroleum Nadeem Babar who was part of entourage of Prime Minister during the recent visit of China, told The News.

It is the same Chinese Shenua Group, Mr Babar said that had earlier quit the Thar power project because the government of former prime minister Shaukat Aziz during Musharraf regime had backed out of already decided tariff rates of 5.67 cent per unit with the group and demanded a rate of 5.39 cent per unit. Shenua Group was interested in setting up two power plants of 350MW each in Thar coalfield.

“This Chinese company has developed the expertise to turn the coal into synthetic diesel and if it is happened in Pakistan, the country will have sustainable diesel supply in the country at affordable prices, which will play pivotal role in stimulating the economic activities in the country,” he said.

According to oil and gas sector sources, Pakistan’s monthly diesel requirement stands at average 600,000 tones according to which annual need stands at 7.2 million tons and the project to make Thar coal liquid (diesel) will also help reduce the import bill of diesel.

Thar coalfield in Sindh province is bestowed with 185 billion tons of lignite coal, which can fuel power generation of over 100,000 megawatts for more than two centuries. Pakistan needs to increase share of coal in country’s energy mix to at least 19 percent by 2030 and 50 percent by 2050. And if the diesel production from Thar coal has started then sky is the limit. In 1992, Geological Survey of Pakistan (GSP) discovered coal deposits worth 175-185 billion tons of lignite in Thar.

However, the total reserves of block II alone are sufficient to support 5000MW of energy for 50 years; enough to pull the country out of the energy crisis. At present, system is getting 602 MW electricity from Thar coal based power plants.
 
PM inaugurates power plant part of CPEC

October 21, 2019
https://tribune.com.pk/story/2084128/1-pm-imran-arrives-karachi-day-long-visit/
Prime Minister Imran Khan, who was in Karachi on a day-long visit on Monday, inaugurated the China Hub Power Generation Plant in Hub, Balochistan, a project under the multi-billion dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

Addressing the inauguration ceremony, the premier said the power plant was the first joint venture between Islamabad and Beijing under CPEC, and expressed his desire to work on such projects in the future.

“The government will facilitate joint collaboration between Pakistani and Chinese businesses in various sectors,” he said, adding Balochistan was full of rich mineral deposits and fisheries — resources which can help boost the country’s foreign exchange.

PM Imran said his government was moving towards the second phase of CPEC, and it had established the CPEC Authority to facilitate the projects.

He said Chinese leadership, during his recent trip to Beijing, had reiterated fast-tracking CPEC projects, adding that his government was committed to increase ease of doing business in the country to attract foreign investment.

Chinese ambassador Yao Jing, federal ministers and other senior officials were also present on the occasion.
 
12,000 MW of Power (electricity) will be added to the National Grid of Pakistan till 2024

902 MW would be added to the system by December

1. 102 MW Gulpur Hydropower project
2. 2 units of 1263 MW Punjab Power Plant RLNG base project near Trimmu Barrage Jhang.

463 MW would be added to the system during 2020

1. Commissioning of third unit of 1263 MW Punjab Power Plant RLNG base project near Trimmu Barrage Jhanng

2040 MW would be added to the system during 2021

1. 330 MW each #Thar Coal Based Power plants,
2. 660 MW coal power project at Port Qasim ,Karachi
3. 720 MW Karot Hydropower Project

2160 MW would be added to the system during 2022

1. 330 MW Thar Coal,
2. First unit of 1320 MW Thar coal power project,
3. 870 MW Suki Kinari hydropower project Naran
4. 300 MW coal plant at Gwadar.

Moreover, 1,980 MW and 2,124 MW and 2200 MW would be added to the system during 2023 and 2024 respectively. The projects were included

1. 700 MW Azad Pttan Hydropower
2. 1,124 MW Kohala Hydropower
3. 300 MWAshkot Hydropower
4. 640 MW Mahl Hydropower
5. 450 MW Athmuqam Hydropower
6. 82 MW Turtonas Uzghor hydropower projects.
7. 2200 Nuclear Power Plants Karachi
 
#Pakistan Army to Generate Electricity for its Establishments

Pakistan Army is all set to generate electricity for its garrisons and establishments across the country to cut their expenditure on power which is estimated to be around Rs 15 billion for 240 MW.

According to the reports, the Pakistan Army is planning on harnessing renewable energy through solar parks. With an aim to establish 1-5MW solar parks in each garrison, the pilot project will generate 40MW energy and no public money will be used on solar parks for 25 years
 
View of 150 MW Patrind Hydropwer Project (Operational) near Muzaffarabad Azad Kashmir



75561638_2312211138906571_5414053503515492352_o.jpg





73497922_2312211198906565_4933505465490341888_o.jpg
 
12,000 MW of Power (electricity) will be added to the National Grid of Pakistan till 2024

902 MW would be added to the system by December

1. 102 MW Gulpur Hydropower project
2. 2 units of 1263 MW Punjab Power Plant RLNG base project near Trimmu Barrage Jhang.

463 MW would be added to the system during 2020

1. Commissioning of third unit of 1263 MW Punjab Power Plant RLNG base project near Trimmu Barrage Jhanng

2040 MW would be added to the system during 2021

1. 330 MW each #Thar Coal Based Power plants,
2. 660 MW coal power project at Port Qasim ,Karachi
3. 720 MW Karot Hydropower Project

2160 MW would be added to the system during 2022

1. 330 MW Thar Coal,
2. First unit of 1320 MW Thar coal power project,
3. 870 MW Suki Kinari hydropower project Naran
4. 300 MW coal plant at Gwadar.

Moreover, 1,980 MW and 2,124 MW and 2200 MW would be added to the system during 2023 and 2024 respectively. The projects were included

1. 700 MW Azad Pttan Hydropower
2. 1,124 MW Kohala Hydropower
3. 300 MWAshkot Hydropower
4. 640 MW Mahl Hydropower
5. 450 MW Athmuqam Hydropower
6. 82 MW Turtonas Uzghor hydropower projects.
7. 2200 Nuclear Power Plants Karachi

What about Dasu, Mohmand, Tarbela Ext 5 and Kurram Tangi? These projects are equal to a combined 6500~7000 MW...
 
Why dont we promote hybrid renewables.. Like a mixture of wind and sun...
Our coastal line including the current wind power plants around jhampir are gud for this.
The current global per watt cost os very low and the power plants can easily produce a gud few hundred watts from the allocated land. This carrot can be used to decrease the wind tariffs which are ridiculously high and as oer contract will remain so for around a decade
 
ISLAMABAD: China will help Pakistan turn Thar coal into diesel (into Mullah Diesel) and to this effect, the Pakistan authorities managed to contact Chinese Shenhua Ningxia Coal Industry Group, which is known for turning coal into liquid.

The Shenhua Ningxia Coal Industry Group, a subsidiary of China’s biggest coal producer, the Shenhua Group, has already successfully installed the project to convert coal into oil in the northwestern Chinese region of Ningxia, the biggest plant of its kind in the world.

The coal-to-liquid (CTL) project, which has an annual production capacity of 4 million tons of oil, was built by the Shenhua Ningxia Coal Industry Group, a subsidiary of China’s biggest coal producer, the Shenhua Group.

“We have held preliminary meeting with the management of the said company and more talks will also be held for reaching a win-win agreement and this very important development took place when Prime Minister Imran Khan visited China on October 8 and being a member in his delegation managed to have meeting with top management of the said Chinese company Shenua-Ningxia, which has the expertise to turn coal into liquid (synthetic diesel). And if the said company comes and installs the Coal-to-Liquid (CoT) plant in Thar and starts turning the coal into diesel, it will prove not less than a game changer as there are huge coal deposits in Thar,” Adviser to Prime Minister on Petroleum Nadeem Babar who was part of entourage of Prime Minister during the recent visit of China, told The News.

It is the same Chinese Shenua Group, Mr Babar said that had earlier quit the Thar power project because the government of former prime minister Shaukat Aziz during Musharraf regime had backed out of already decided tariff rates of 5.67 cent per unit with the group and demanded a rate of 5.39 cent per unit. Shenua Group was interested in setting up two power plants of 350MW each in Thar coalfield.

“This Chinese company has developed the expertise to turn the coal into synthetic diesel and if it is happened in Pakistan, the country will have sustainable diesel supply in the country at affordable prices, which will play pivotal role in stimulating the economic activities in the country,” he said.

According to oil and gas sector sources, Pakistan’s monthly diesel requirement stands at average 600,000 tones according to which annual need stands at 7.2 million tons and the project to make Thar coal liquid (diesel) will also help reduce the import bill of diesel.

Thar coalfield in Sindh province is bestowed with 185 billion tons of lignite coal, which can fuel power generation of over 100,000 megawatts for more than two centuries. Pakistan needs to increase share of coal in country’s energy mix to at least 19 percent by 2030 and 50 percent by 2050. And if the diesel production from Thar coal has started then sky is the limit. In 1992, Geological Survey of Pakistan (GSP) discovered coal deposits worth 175-185 billion tons of lignite in Thar.

However, the total reserves of block II alone are sufficient to support 5000MW of energy for 50 years; enough to pull the country out of the energy crisis. At present, system is getting 602 MW electricity from Thar coal based power plants.
 
Azad Pattan hydropower project approved by JWG

The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) Joint Working Group (JWG) has approved 700MW Azad Pattan hydropower project for inclusion in the CPEC list.

This will assist to reach early financial close, start construction next year and also arrange the project's financing in RMB – Chinese currency. The project will also be able to avail other facilities available to CPEC projects which will expedite the project and bring down the tariff, it was reported.

Azad Pattan hydropower project is a 700MW run-of-the-river pondage scheme on the River #Jhelum, in the #AJ& #K, with capability of 4 hours daily peaking. The project will be located near the Azad Pattan Bridge, upstream of 720MW Karot hydropower project and downstream of 640 MW Mahal hydropower project and will be a part of the River Jhelum hydel cascade.

The project will deliver approximately 3.3 billion units of clean and renewable energy into the national grid after its completion in 2026. Being developed under the 2002 Power Policy, the project will be transferred free of cost to the government after the term. The tariff approved by NEPRA at US ¢ 7.1/ kWh is the lowest hydel tariff in Pakistan to date. The tariff will fall to around US ¢ 4/kWh after the debt payment period (12 years), and to around US ¢ 1/ kWh after the concession term ( 30 years) throughout its long life remaining useful life of over 70 years; off course all subject to indexation as allowed under the power policies.

The River Jhelum cascade is developing the potential of the flowing river water with (upstream to downstream) 1,124MW Kohala, 640 MW Mahl, 700 MW Azad Pattan and 720 MW Karot – a total of 3,184 MW and generating some 15 billion kWh annually; approximately 10% of Pakistan's total electricity generation.

The river cascade development enables the maximum and most efficient use of the river water. In addition to energy generation, the cascade will store water and reduce the silt going into the Mangla Reservoir thus increasing life of Mangla Dam water storage.

 
K-Electric to build 900 MW LNG-based power station

November 12, 2019


2097794-image-1573499866-969-640x480.jpg


Karachi’s power needs are growing faster than the rest of the country and K-Electric is anticipating a bigger shortfall next year, which may necessitate load management. PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD: K-Electric has planned to start construction of 900-megawatt re-gasified liquefied natural gas (RLNG)-based Bin Qasim Power Station-III next month in an effort to provide cheap electricity to the consumers of Karachi.

“The company will invest $650 million in building the Bin Qasim Power Station-III and work will commence in December. It is expected to start producing electricity by the summer of 2021,” K-Electric Chief Executive Officer Moonis Alvi said while talking to The Express Tribune.

He said the project had received all required approvals and was part of K-Electric’s planned initiatives, which would lead to investment of around $3 billion across the power value chain over the next few years.

K-Electric has awarded contract for the 900MW project to Siemens AG and Harbin Electric International.

Alvi recalled that the last addition to K-Electric’s generation capacity was made in 2012, when the 560MW Bin Qasim Power Station-II was launched.

He emphasised that the Bin Qasim Power Station-III represented one of the largest private-sector investments in the country’s power sector and was in line with the power utility’s vision of improving its generation efficiency.

“The project is part of K-Electric’s business plan formulated after a detailed study to review all possible solutions for increase in the generation capacity including long-term offtake of additional power from the national grid with the objective of bridging the supply-demand gap and decommissioning of its old furnace oil-based Bin Qasim Power Station-I,” Alvi said.

He ruled out the notion that the project would be a drain on the national exchequer as it would run on imported fuel. “We are replacing older and inefficient furnace oil-based units with new low-cost and efficient generation units; this is a highly efficient combined-cycle plant with around 60% efficiency against 30% efficiency for older plants,” he said.

“The 900MW RLNG plant will result in lower import costs for the government, affordable power for the consumers and a much smaller carbon footprint.”

Alvi pointed out that natural gas was a dwindling resource in Pakistan and the shift to RLNG was a practical compromise in every way. K-Electric was getting on an average around 105-110 million cubic feet of natural gas per day (mmcfd) against allocation of 276 mmcfd, he said, adding that the country was already experiencing a situation where households were facing low gas pressure.

“We must consume RLNG in older, less-efficient plants and we must not lose out on gaining the maximum advantage from shifting away from furnace oil,” he stressed, adding that the new power station would now be built with just 5% advance payment following re-negotiation of terms and the first unit of 450MW would be commissioned in only 19 months instead of 24 months.

Alvi pointed out that at present National Transmission and Despatch Company (NTDC) was supplying 650MW to Karachi. K-Electric had sought additional power from the national grid last year but NTDC refused to provide, citing overloading and system stability concerns, he said.

NTDC, however, allowed an additional 150MW from wind power plants in Gharo for two years, which K-Electric was already receiving, he revealed. However, wind power plants depend on the average wind pressure, which fluctuates substantially, rendering supply less reliable.

Additionally, he said, K-Electric requested for the import of 500MW from the national grid through the under-construction nuclear power plants Kanupp-II and III and if that was made available, K-Electric would be able to replace the remaining inefficient power plants.

Saying that the existing supply of 650MW was without a valid contract which K-Electric and NTDC/Central Power Purchasing Agency (CPPA) still had to sign, Alvi stressed that K-Electric was ready to invest in interconnections when and if an agreement was put in place for the supply of additional power.

Regarding electricity demand in Karachi, Alvi said Karachi’s power needs were growing faster than the rest of the country and K-Electric was anticipating a bigger shortfall next year, which may necessitate load management, part of which was already seen this year.

Based on the projected peak demand outlook for FY23 in K-Electric’s service area, even with the commissioning of the 900MW RLNG project and the proposed 700MW coal-fired power plant, there may be a shortfall of around 1,400MW and the company was working with all stakeholders to bridge the gap, he added.

Looking at Karachi’s urgent needs, a comprehensive study was undertaken and in August 2017, the K-Electric board approved the construction of the 900MW power plant at the Bin Qasim Power Complex.

Alvi pointed out that when the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (Nepra) determined K-Electric’s multi-year tariff (MYT), which was notified by the government in May 2019, the proposed 900MW plant was also part of the tariff and investment plan, which substantiated the fact that the project met all regulatory, operational and financial requirements.

Furthermore, when Nepra made some changes to its determination, even though the project was already approved, “we went through the approval process once again”.


Published in The Express Tribune, November 12th, 2019.
 
Back
Top Bottom