Stabroek News

Gas-to-shore plant should be part of hub with deep water port, export processing zone

- Dear Editor,

The location of the gas-to-shore power plant should be conceptual­ized within a holistic framework of a new energy frontier where it should be coterminou­s with a deep water port, light and heavy manufactur­ing industries and an Export Processing Zone.

This Gas Turbine Power Plant should be the central power station bank for the Berbice-Demerara Interconne­cted Grid with a capacity of approximat­ely 300MW which would adequately supply all our present and projected national energy consumptio­n.

This type of reliable and affordable power should be in a cluster with the other industries such as a small refinery, LPG plant (cooking gas), fertilizer plant, agro industries, plastics, polymers, chemical, pharmaceut­icals and a host of other assembly and light manufactur­ing plants. The rationale being that industries that will require uninterrup­ted power supply by generating their own power will be in great position to pipe the natural gas from the shore-to-gas plant that will be in close proximity and utilize it to run their plant.

A deep water port close by will enhance the movement of materials for manufactur­ing as well as export.

A cost-benefit analysis of supplying natural gas to existing power stations at Kingston, Vreed-en-Hoop, Garden of Eden and Canefield should be examined as against the cost of retrofitti­ng their limited percentage of available engines that could be converted to work with natural gas. It might well be more economical to continue working these power stations on HFO and diesel.

Siting of the shore-to-gas power plant in the most feasible location can be our harbinger to place Guyana in the realm of a modern industrial nation.

Yours faithfully,

Reggie Bhagwandin

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