By Region,Africa,By Region,Projects - February 09, 2010

Kenya to commence 4×70 MW program at Olkaria and Naivasha

written by: lxrichter

Naivasha geothermal power plant, Kenya
Kenya will soon commence construction of its biggest geothermal power generating project, involving four 70MW plants at Olkaria and Naivasha.

Released in news from the country, “Kenya will soon commence construction of its biggest geothermal power generating project, involving four 70MW plants at Olkaria, Naivasha.

This follows the signing of a contract between KenGen and a New Zealand company Sinclair Knight Merz for the implementation of the Sh98 billion (US$1.2 billion) geothermal power project which will also see substations constructed and transmission lines and other infrastructure laid.

“The consultancy will comprise technical design and preparation of the tender documents, pre-qualification of potential bidders, tender evaluation and contract negotiations, supervision of construction contracts and support during the warranty period,” said KenGen Managing Director Eddy Njoroge.

The project, comprising Olkaria I and Olkaria IV fields, is part of their fast-track projects which should be complete in 2013. It will partly be financed by KenGen, the government and a host of other development partners including the Japan International Corporation Agency, AFD and the World Bank.

Mr Njoroge said KenGen had finalised the procurement of two drilling rigs for the power plant. The move followed the rejection of an appeal by one of the unsuccessful bidders who had taken the matter to the Public Procurement Appeals Board and its parts of their sustained effort to expand geothermal power generation in the country.

The signing comes barely a month after the generating company awarded a Sh3.93 billion contract to an Austrian company, Andritz Hydro GmbhH for the installation of a 24MegaWatt third turbine generator at the Kindaruma Power Station which would boost the output of the station from 40 MW to 72 MW.

The Austrian company was also expected to set up and rehabilitate the two existing turbine generator units at the station in a project which is expected to be completed in 41 months.

Source: Capital FM Kenya

This entry was posted on Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 at 11:12 am and is filed under Africa, By Region, Projects. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Comments

  1. Thanks for the information, when do you think the project will commence? I am eagery waiting to be updated!

    Kind regards,

    Njoroge.

  2.  
  3. Don´t know about details, but it seems the project starts soon.

  4.  
  5. Is it possible to be this year?

  6.  
  7. very unlikely in this speed, but it should be achievable in the next 2-3 years

  8.  

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