Categories: NewsSolar Power

Reliance Power To Commission Asia’s Largest Solar Thermal Power Plant

Himachal Pradesh will soon get another tranche of a multimillion-dollar loan from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) for the construction of a hydropower project, a minister said here Tuesday.

“ADB has agreed in principle to finance the 48 MW Surgani Sundla hydro-electric project in Chamba district,” Power Minister Sujan Singh Pathania told reporters here.

The state-run Himachal Pradesh Power Corporation (HPPCL) Managing is executing the Surgani Sundla project.

Pathania said a decision to finance the project was taken a meeting with Takesshi Shiihara, portfolio management specialist of the energy division, South Asia department of the ADB, here.

Pathania urged Shiihara to speed up the process of $67.9 million for Surgani Sundla project being constructed in the downstream of Baira Suil hydropower project.

The ADB is currently funding $800 million loan under the Himachal Pradesh Clean Energy Development Investment Programme for the four hydel projects being constructed by HPPCL.

These are: the 111 MW Sawra Kuddu project in Shimla district, 195 MW Kashang project in Kinnaur district, 100 MW Sainj in Kullu district and 450 MW Shongtong-Karcham project also in Kinnaur.

The minister said discussions were also held on Tranche-IV loan of $315 million for the Shongtong-Karcham project. This loan is being funded under the investment programme to establish a sustainable power sector in the state in order to improve its finances.

 

India’s Reliance Power To Commission Asia’s Largest Solar Thermal Power Plant Next Year

A subsidiary of one of India’s leading private sector power generating companies is expected to commission a 125 MW solar thermal power plant by March 2014. The power plant is expected to be the largest solar thermal power plant in Asia and the largest in the world using the linear Fresnel reflective technology.

The power plant is part of the first phase of the ambitious Indian program, the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission, which aims to set up 22,000 MW of solar power capacity by 2022. The project developer was allocated 100 MW capacity under the tender process completed in 2011 but decided to develop an additional 25 MW capacity.

Of the 125 MW capacity, only 100 MW has been contracted by the central government, while the balance is expected to be sold to private utilities. The project developer claims that the project can generate up to 280 GWh of electricity every year and can offset over 2.1 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions over a period of 10 years.

Earlier this year, the project became the worlds largest solar plant to be registered under the United Nations Clean Development Mechanism. If commissioned in March 2014, the project would have missed the commissioning deadline by almost a year but would still mark a significant milestone in India’s quest to master the concentrated solar power technology.

The project would be commissioned at an estimated cost of $330 million with a number of international and Indian banks pitching in. Compact Linear Fresnel Reflective technology, supplied by AREVA USA, has been used in the project. The reflectors focus the solar radiation to an overhead pipe that contains a heat-absorbing fluid. This fluid transfers heat to water, producing steam to drive a steam turbine, which in turn is connected, to a generator.

Indian companies are planning to set up large solar power plants in the near future. A 150 MW solar PV power plant is likely to come up in the western state of Maharashtra soon while another private sector company, Welspun Energy, is working on a 130 MW solar PV project in the central state of Madhya Pradesh.

Pimagazine Asia Admin

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