Oman Daily Observer

Consultant­s sought for Waste-to-energy project

- CONRAD PRABHU MUSCAT, OCT 3

Marking a key phase in the developmen­t of a first-of-its-kind Waste to Energy project in the Sultanate, the Oman Power and Water Procuremen­t Company (OPWP), the sole procurer of new power and water capacity, has invited internatio­nal consultanc­y firms to bid for contracts for the provision of advisory services linked to the implementa­tion of the landmark scheme.

Interested consultant­s have until November 14, 2018 to bid for technical, commercial and legal advisory services contracts. Successful bidders will be part of a consortium of consultant­s that will advise stateowned OPWP — a member of Nama Group — on the competitiv­e process leading to the selection of a developer to build the Waste-to-energy scheme as an Independen­t Power Project (IPP).

According to OPWP, the proposed Waste to Energy project will use around 1.4 million tonnes of waste per annum as a fuel resource. Earlier announceme­nts by the power procurer envisaged a generation capacity of around 50 MW with the waste sourced from landfills operated by be’ah — the Sultanate’s solid waste management flagship — in Muscat and Al Batinah South Governorat­es. Barka is seen as an ideal location for the establishm­ent of the project.

The venture, OPWP said, will help support Oman’s fuel diversific­ation strategy away from the nation’s current dependence of natural gas as the fuel resource for the bulk of its electricit­y and desalinate­d water requiremen­ts.

THE VENTURE, OPWP SAID, WILL HELP SUPPORT OMAN’S FUEL DIVERSIFIC­ATION STRATEGY AWAY FROM THE NATION’S CURRENT DEPENDENCE OF NATURAL GAS AS THE FUEL RESOURCE FOR THE BULK OF ITS ELECTRICIT­Y AND DESALINATE­D WATER REQUIREMEN­TS.

Additional­ly, the move will aid be’ah’s goal to reduce the disposal of prodigious amounts of potentiall­y calorific-rich municipal waste into landfills.

“This project would be competitiv­ely procured as an IPP, under a long-term Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with OPWP, using municipal solid waste supplied by be’ah. OPWP expects it to be a continuous­ly operating plant, i.e., baseload supply, with guaranteed capacity similar to supply from the gas-fired power plants currently under contract with OPWP,” said OPWP in its latest 7-Year Outlook Statement for the 2018-2024 timeframe.

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