Vietnam’s largest power plant in Laos under construction

Vietnam Firm Starts Building $441 Million Power Plant In Laos Government

HANOI -(Dow Jones)- Vietnam’s Viet Lao Power JSC has started building a 332- megawatt hydroelectric power plant in Laos, which is expected to export part of it electricity output to Vietnam, the government said over the weekend.

The $441-million Xekaman power plant is being built 80 kilometers from the border between the two countries, the government said in a statement.

The plant will sell its output to Laos’ southern region and central Vietnam, the government said.

It said the plant is part of a deal previously signed between the two countries to jointly develop hydropower plants with combined capacity of 5,000 megawatts.

The plant is scheduled to start power generation from 2014, it added.

-By Vu Trong Khanh, Dow Jones Newswires; +84 4 35123042; trong-khanh.vu@ dowjones.com

  (END) Dow Jones Newswires
  03-06-112123ET
  Copyright (c) 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Original Sources:

Cached:  http://english.vovnews.vn/Home/Vietnams-largest-power-plant-in-Laos-under-construction/20113/124507.vov

(VOV) – Construction of a Vietnamese-invested hydroelectric-power plant started in Laos’ Attapeu province on March 6 with capitalisation of US$441 million.

Sekaman 1, one of key projects in the energy cooperation programme between the two governments, is the largest hydro-electric power plant invested by Vietnam in its neighbouring country.

Addressing the ground breaking ceremony, Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai said Sekaman 1 is one of the largest projects invested abroad by Vietnamese firms and described it as a symbol of cooperation between the two countries.

Cooperation in electricity development is one of the key areas in bilateral economic ties between the two countries, he said.

The BOT plant is designed to have a total capacity of 332 MW in the lower part of the Sekaman river, about 80km from the Vietnam-Laos border gate.

Sekaman 1 is part of a project which includes the Sekaman Sanxay hydroelectric-power plant. The two are expected to go into operation after five years of construction, generating a total 1.22 billion kWh a year.

Twenty percent of the electricity will be consumed in Laos while the remaining will be sold to Vietnam through a 500kV transmission line between the two countries.

In addition to the project, the Song Da Corp, the project’s investor, has studied to implement six other hydroelectric-power projects with a total capacity of about 1,400MW which are expected to turn out a combined output of 5.4 billion kWh a year in southern Laos.

Of the six projects, Sekaman 3 is expected to produce electricity by the end of this year, while construction of Sekaman 4 and Sekong will begin by the end of 2011 or early 2012.

Related:

 

Leave a comment