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Thai govt to mull power offer from Laos

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Govt to mull power offer from Laos
SOMLUCK SRIMALEE
THE NATION
HONGSA, LAOS

30274616-01_big.jpg

BANGKOK: -- THAILAND will consider a proposal to increase the memorandum of understanding on the purchase of electricity from Laos from 7,000 megawatts to 10,000MW after committing to buy 3,316MW this year, Energy Minister General Anantaporn Kanjanarat said yesterday. He was speaking after a ceremony to open Laos's first lignite-mine-mouth power-generation plant, the Hongsa Power Plant.

The minister said that under the current MoU, which expires at the end of this year, the Kingdom had committed to buying about 5,000MW of electricity from Laos, including 1,473MW from the Hongsa Power Plant.

A contract for a further 2,000MW will be signed next year, making the ongoing commitment 7,000MW in total.

Meanwhile, the Laotian energy and mines minister, Khammany Inthirath, has proposed increasing the amount of power purchased under the MoU to 10,000MW, with such an agreement possibly to be signed next year, Anantaporn |said.

If approved, this would enable Thailand to boost the electricity it purchases from abroad to 14,700MW by 2036, he added.

According to Thailand's 20-year sustainable-electricity plan, it will buy 7,000MW from Laos between 2015 and 2026, and a further 7,700MW from Laos and other Asean countries such as Myanmar from 2027 to 2036.

Completion by March

The third and final generation unit at Hongsa Power Co's lignite-mine-mouth power plant will be completed by March.

The next three projects under the Kingdom's power deal with Laos - the Xe Pian-Xe Nam Noi, Nam Ngiep 1 and Sai Ya Buri hydropower plants - will supply electricity to Thailand by 2019.

Hongsa Power Co was formed in 2009 by Banpu Power, which holds a 40-per-cent stake, Ratchaburi Electricity Generating Holding, also with a 40-per-cent holding, and Lao Holding State Enterprise, which owns the remaining 20 per cent, to develop and operate a 1,878MW plant at a total investment of US$3.71 billion (Bt133 billion).

The consortium has been granted a 25-year concession to operate the plant from next year. It has created 700 jobs, up to 60 per cent of them for Laotians.

Banpu chief executive officer Somruedee Chaimongkol said Hongsa Power formed a key element in its strategy to diversify further from mining to power-plant business. At present, up to 40 per cent of Banpu's net profit is from power-plant operations - driven by both lignite and renewable energy - while 60 per cent is from mining.

By 2020, the company targets its power-plant business will generate up to 50 per cent of net profit, she said.

In Laos, besides the Hongsa power-plant project, Banpu is |interested in expanding its investment in others forms electricity |generation such as hydropower, to drive its electricity portfolio to 2,400MW by 2020 and 4,000MW by 2025.

The company has already expanded its overseas power-plant investment in Japan, Laos and China, and is studying further investment - both lignite- and renewable energy-based - in Indonesia, Myanmar and Vietnam, the CEO said.

Ratchaburi Electricity Generat-ing Holding CEO Rum Herabat said his company was also studying expanding its investment in hydropower projects in Laos after Hongsa Power Plant's successful opening.

"We are considering expansion in Laos and other countries in Asean, such as Myanmar and Indonesia, which would both extend our investment and secure the country's electricity system," he said.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/business/Govt-to-mull-power-offer-from-Laos-30274616.html

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-- The Nation 2015-12-10

The usual confusion!

MW is power plant capacity and MWh is what you buy, the electricity generated by the power plant capacity. Capacity times hours the capacity is producing.

The hub of "mulling".

By the time the developers get done with our lovely once-green planet, it will not be worth living on. All in the name of profit. Oh, and increasing the 'standard of living'-- true in many ways in a material sense, but what good does having a crapload of consumer junk do you when you can't breathe, the rivers are all dammed, and the fish are all farmed? Look for the select few rich to get richer, too, while the rest of us struggle to maintain.

from wikipedia:

Primarily because of latent high moisture content and low energy density of brown coal, carbon dioxide emissions from traditional brown-coal-fired plants are generally much higher per megawatt generated than for comparable black-coal plants, with the world's highest-emitting plant being Hazelwood Power Station, Victoria. The operation of traditional brown-coal plants, particularly in combination with strip mining, can be politically contentious due to environmental concerns.

from ratcatcher's link:

"The lignite mine is an opencast mine with an estimated proven lignite reserves of approximately 370.8Mt. Based on an average annual lignite production of 14.3Mt, the reserves are expected to last for 26 years of operations."

All this for a lousy 26 years of profits. What happens then? We start using the renewable energy we should have developed in the first place?

Edited by DeepInTheForest

I hope CO2 from the Laos plant respects the Thai border and not put its citizens at a health risk. wai2.gif

from ratcatcher's link:

"The lignite mine is an opencast mine with an estimated proven lignite reserves of approximately 370.8Mt. Based on an average annual lignite production of 14.3Mt, the reserves are expected to last for 26 years of operations."

All this for a lousy 26 years of profits. What happens then? We start using the renewable energy we should have developed in the first place?

Stop!! this is Thailand and your making to much sense. Coal is coal dirty. I guess its the country's way of saying p** on climate change. Coal can be fairly clean under the right conditions called MAINTENANCE but this word is misnomer here. Full speed ahead and dam the casualties.

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