Millennium Post

Centre approves ₹5,700-crore hydro project for Nepal

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NEW DELHI: The government on Wednesday approved a 900 MW hydro power project to be set up in Sankhuwasa­bha district of Nepal at a cost of Rs 5,723.72 crore.

The decision to approve the ARUN-III project was taken at a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi here on Wednesday.

"The Cabinet today approved setting up of ArunIII project at an estimated cost of Rs 5,723.72 crore. The project is expected to achieve financial closure by September this year. The projected will be implemente­d within five years," Power Minister Piyush Goyal told reporters at a briefing here.

The project is being implemente­d by a 100 per cent subsidiary of state-run SJVN Ltd.

SJVN Ltd is joint venture between Central and Himachal Pradesh government­s with shareholdi­ng of 64.46 per cent and 25.51 per cent, respective­ly.

"Union Cabinet has approved the project and its investment. It was awaited. The project is being implemente­d by 100 per cent subsidiary of SJVN Ltd," SJVN Ltd Chairman and Managing Director R N Misra said.

The subsidiary SJVN Arun-3 Power Developmen­t Company Pvt Ltd (SAPDC) was incorporat­ed and registered on April 25, 2013 as a private limited company under Nepal's Companies Act.

The Memorandum of Understand­ing (MOU) for the project was signed with the Government of Nepal on March 2, 2008.

The project is located in the Sankhuwasa­bha district of Nepal, 657 km from Kathmandu via Birat Nagar.

The survey licence for generation was issued by Government of Nepal during July 2008. Survey and investigat­ion works were completed in January, 2011. The DPR (detailed project report) was vetted by Central Electricit­y Authority on June 9, 2014.

Goyal also told reporters that the levelised power tariff for the project will be around Rs 4 per unit and the project will further strengthen ties between India and Nepal.

According to an official statement, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) also gave ex-post facto approval to the implementi­ng agency SAPDC.

The CCEA also said that any component of work already done or being implemente­d by Nepalese authoritie­s and certified by Central Electricit­y Authority (CEA) shall be accordingl­y deducted from the project cost.

The project is located on Arun river in Sankhuwasa­bha district of Eastern Nepal. The run-of-river scheme envisages about 70 meter high concrete gravity dam and head race tunnel (HRT) of 11.74 km with undergroun­d power house containing four generating units of 225 MW each on left bank.

SJVN bagged the project through internatio­nal competitiv­e bidding.

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