http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/business/Kenya-to-import-LNG-coal-to-generate-electricity-/-/2560/2066888/-/yfski1z/-/index.html
Kenya will import liquefied natural gas and coal to generate 1,800 Megawatts of electricity in Mombasa County, which will be injected into the national grid.
Kenya will import liquefied natural gas and coal to generate 1,800 Megawatts of electricity in Mombasa County, which will be injected into the national grid.
The Ministry of Energy expects to import liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Qatar and coal from South Africa and Zimbabwe.
The imported LNG, to be used in the Dogo Kundu
power plant, which has a capacity of 700 to 800 Megawatts, will also be
used as substitute fuel for some of the existing and planned thermal
generation facilities in Mombasa County.
In October, the Kenyan government opened bids from
private investors interested in building the LNG facility and coal
fired power plant generating about 900 to 1,000MW respectively in
Mombasa County and Lamu County.
Energy Cabinet Secretary Davis Chirchir said the
Ministry is talking to the Qatari government and private firms based in
the country to supply LNG to the power plant to be built at Dongo
Kundu.
“Kenya is talking to suppliers from South Africa
and Zimbabwe to supply coal to the Lamu power plant. The government
wants to reduce the industrial cost of power to $0.09 per kilowatt hour
from the current $0.15,” he said.
The Ministry of Energy received expression of
interest from 36 companies for the Dogo Kundu LNG facility and 26 for
the Lamu plant. Bidders were required to show ability to raise at least
$1 billion at competitive terms and have strong balance sheets with a
minimum of $200 million.
Successful investors will build, own and operate
the plants, with an option to transfer to the government after
recovering full value of investment. The two plants are part of Kenya’s
ambitious plan of generating 5,500MW for injection to the national grid
within the next three years.
Kenya’s interconnected power system currently has a
capacity of 1,664MW comprising of hydro (770MW); geothermal (241MW);
thermal (622MW); co-generation (26MW) and wind (5MW).
The recorded peak electricity demand is suppressed
at 1,357MW while the unsuppressed demand is estimated at 1,700MW,
depicting a shortfall of 536MW after providing for a 30 per cent reserve
margin.
The successful bidder for Dogo Kundu plant will be
required to build a floating storage and re-gasification unit with
sufficient capacity and infrastructure to supply natural gas to power
plants using heavy fuel oil.
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