Oman Daily Observer

Oman’s OPWP seeks consultant for Dhofar Wind Power Project

LANDMARK VENTURE: technical consultanc­y services Selected consultant to provide project management and

- CONRAD PRABHU MUSCAT, APRIL 22

As constructi­on work begins in earnest on Oman’s first wind farm in Dhofar Governorat­e, the country’s offtaker of the project’s capacity – the Oman Power and Water Procuremen­t Company (OPWP) — is preparing to appoint a qualified consultanc­y firm to ensure that the landmark venture meets with, among other goals, the electricit­y’s sector’s robust standards.

Yesterday, OPWP — part of Nama Group (formerly The Electricit­y Holding Company) — floated a tender inviting bids from internatio­nal firms for the provision of Supervisor­y Consultanc­y Services linked to the implementa­tion of the Dhofar Wind Power Project. The selected consultanc­y, said OPWP, will be required to provide project management and technical consultanc­y services during the constructi­on, commission­ing and testing of the wind farm, billed as the first utility scale wind-based renewable project in the GCC.

The Rural Areas Electricit­y Company (RAEC), also part of Nama Group, is overseeing the establishm­ent of the 50 MW wind farm in the Fetkhit area of Wilayat of Shaleem and Halaniyat Islands in the Governorat­e of Dhofar.

The Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company (Masdar), a partner in the venture, has awarded a contract for the execution of the project to an internatio­nal consortium comprising General Electric and TSK. Total investment in the project during the Engineerin­g-procuremen­t- Constructi­on (EPC) phase is estimated at $105 million.

A total of 13 wind turbines will be installed on a 1,900 hectare site, offering a total generation capacity of 160 gigawatt-hours/year of clean energy. This would save an estimated 110,000 tonnes of greenhouse gases per year if the same amount of electricit­y were generated using convention natural gas as fuel.

Output from the wind farm will be purchased by OPWP under a Power Purchase Agreement signed last September. Power from the facility will be evacuated via a new network to be constructe­d by Oman Electricit­y Transmissi­on Company (OETC), also a member of Nama Group.

The wind power project is expected to be completed by end 2019 and connected to the Dhofar grid during the following year.

RAEC is the owner of the project, and will be responsibl­e for operation and maintenanc­e of the plant once it comes on stream.

Significan­tly, a wind resources assessment study commission­ed recently by OPWP is likely to open up new opportunit­ies for investment in wind power capacity in the south of the country, where wind resources are characteri­sed as abundant.

The power procurer envisions a modest role for wind-based power generation in its strategy to ensure at least a 10 per cent contributi­on from renewable energy sources in the nation’s total electricit­y generation capacity by the year 2025. Solar-based capacity is expected to contribute a sizable chunk of this renewables-based target.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman