Geothermal power production at Menengai. Ormat Technologies plans to add 24MW to the national grid by next year. PHOTO | FILE
By JOHN GACHIRI, jgachiri@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Sunday, December 7 2014 at 18:30
Posted Sunday, December 7 2014 at 18:30
In Summary
- Ormat Technologies plans to construct a new unit at Olkaria, connecting more to electricity.
- Ormat has gradually been expanding power generation at its Naivasha-based plant.
- Ormat will continue adding more power plants at Olkaria which will help reduce the average installation costs for the power firm.
Geothermal power firm Ormat Technologies plans to add
24 megawatts of electricity to the national grid by next year when it
completes construction of a new unit at Olkaria.
Ormat which is generating geothermal power at its Olkaria
III power plant amended the 20-year power purchase agreement with
electricity distributor Kenya Power to allow it generate 134 megawatts (MW) from the current 110MW after work on the additional unit is complete.
Ormat will add the 24MW once it expands Olkaria III by setting up a fourth power plant next year.
“Ormat’s Olkaria geothermal complex provides clean,
reliable and firm power to over 200,000 Kenyan households, increasing
the complex by an additional 24MW will further benefit the Kenyan
people. We see Kenya, with its progressive renewable energy policy as an
important market for us and where we will continue to explore
additional projects,” Ormat chief executive Isaac Angel said.
Ormat has gradually been expanding power generation at its Naivasha-based plant.
In February, it added a third plant that brought an
extra 26MW into the national grid. The first plant produced 48MW and
the second plant added 36MW.
Ormat will continue adding more power plants at
Olkaria which will help reduce the average installation costs for the
power firm.
“The synergies that derive from adding units to the
existing complex allow smaller plants to be a cost effective and
provide the additional power that the country needs in record speeds,”
said Mr Angel.
Ormat has partnered with other energy firms to produce geothermal power.
The Nevada-based firm recently partnered with
Symbion Power and Civicon, a subsidiary of infrastructure firm
TransCentury, to produce 35MW in Menengai, Nakuru.
The power will be sold to Kenya Power under a 25-year agreement.
Geothermal power is one of the renewable energy
sources that are expected to quicken the achievement of the government’s
ambitious plan to generate 5,000MW in the next three years.
State-owned Geothermal Development Corporation (GDC) has said that it will generate an extra 110MW by December 2015.
GDC will drill steam wells in Menengai which will then be harnessed by three companies that will sell the power to Kenya Power.
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