Built in Tigray Region of Ethiopia, the second wind farm of the country with 120 MW electric generation capacity is set to commence operation.
Miskir Negash, spokesperson for the State power utility company Ethiopian Electric Power Corporation, told newBusinessEthiopia.com that 99 percent of Ashegoda Wind farm is completed. The Project, which has already been partially commissioned with 30 MW already made operational so far, is being constructed by a French firm Vergnet SA, and is financed through French based financial institutions.
Contract administration and construction supervision consultant is being done by Lahmeyer International GmbH, Germany.
Ashegoda when eventually finished is expected to cost up to 210 million Euros, and is located 775 kms north of Addis Ababa
When officially commissioned, it will be its second of its kind, after the earlier inauguration in 2012 of the 51 MW Adama I wind power project.
The Ethiopian government plans to have a power generation of about 890 MW, from a total projected power projects commissioning of about 10,000 MW by the end of the Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP) in 2015.
The Ethiopian government estimates the country has an estimated power generation potential of between 45,000-50,000 MW from hydro sources, a whopping 1.3 million MW from wind power, and more than 5,000 MW potential from Geothermal Project.
The country so far has reached a power generation capacity of 2,178 MW of which 98 percent are from hydro sources, while the rest are from 81 MW from wind power projects, and 7 MW are from geothermal projects.
Mr. Miskir also stated that the massive 6000 MW Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam hydro project, which is being built on the banks of the Blue Nile has had 25 percent of its work completed, while the Gibe III hydro project, being built on the banks of the Omo River in southern Ethiopia, has had 76 percent of its work completed so far.
Contract administration and construction supervision consultant is being done by Lahmeyer International GmbH, Germany.
Ashegoda when eventually finished is expected to cost up to 210 million Euros, and is located 775 kms north of Addis Ababa
When officially commissioned, it will be its second of its kind, after the earlier inauguration in 2012 of the 51 MW Adama I wind power project.
The Ethiopian government plans to have a power generation of about 890 MW, from a total projected power projects commissioning of about 10,000 MW by the end of the Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP) in 2015.
The Ethiopian government estimates the country has an estimated power generation potential of between 45,000-50,000 MW from hydro sources, a whopping 1.3 million MW from wind power, and more than 5,000 MW potential from Geothermal Project.
The country so far has reached a power generation capacity of 2,178 MW of which 98 percent are from hydro sources, while the rest are from 81 MW from wind power projects, and 7 MW are from geothermal projects.
Mr. Miskir also stated that the massive 6000 MW Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam hydro project, which is being built on the banks of the Blue Nile has had 25 percent of its work completed, while the Gibe III hydro project, being built on the banks of the Omo River in southern Ethiopia, has had 76 percent of its work completed so far.
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