By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The 30 turbines lay the ground for the expected injection of first 50 MW of wind power to the national grid in September.
- Electricity from the wind farm in northern county of Marsabit will cost Sh8.6 per unit (8.5 US cents) or half that from diesel generators.
- The full 310-megawatt capacity of the power-generation project, to be delivered by 365 wind turbines, is expected to be in place by July 2017.
The first batch of turbines for the 310-megawatt Lake
Turkana Wind Power plant have arrived at the Mombasa port, taking the
country closer to reaping cheap power from wind.
The shipment of the 30 turbines lays the ground for the
expected injection of first 50 MW of wind power to the national grid in
September.
Electricity from the wind farm in northern county
of Marsabit will cost Sh8.6 per unit (8.5 US cents) or half that from
diesel generators.
The full 310-megawatt capacity of the
power-generation project, to be delivered by 365 wind turbines, is
expected to be in place by July 2017.
Denmark-based Vestas is the supplier and installer of the turbines.
UK-based company Aldwych International is the
single largest investor in the Sh70 billion wind project with a 30.7 per
cent stake. Google has a 12.5 per cent stake after pumping in Sh4
billion last October.
The farm sits on 40,000 acres of land in an area that receives steady winds throughout the year.
Lake Turkana Wind Power Ltd, the company developing
the wind farm, will sell electricity to Kenya Power at Sh8.6 under a
20-year power purchase agreement.
This makes it the third cheapest power source in
Kenya after geothermal energy at Sh7 per unit and hydropower which is
the cheapest at Sh3 per unit.
Thermal generators are the most expensive at Sh18.
“The foundations for the first 30 turbines are
ready, as soon as the turbines arrive in Sarima; the task at hand will
be to hoist the turbines,” Lake Turkana Wind Power general manager
Phylip Leferink said in a statement.
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