
Arab power grid on track
Oct. 26, 2011 - Mandeep Singh - istockanalyst.com
PLANS to connect the entire Arab world through a
single power grid are on track to be completed by
2014, a senior official said yesterday.
The final studies are being conducted on an undersea
connection in the Red Sea after which tenders for
the construction will be floated, said Electricity
and Water Authority chief executive officer Dr Abdulmajeed
Al Awadhi.
"This is expected early next year and the whole
project should take about two years to complete," he
told the GDN.
Dr Al Awadhi was speaking on the sidelines of an
open day held as part of celebrations to mark the
fifth anniversary celebrations of the Hidd Power
Plant, at the Mšvenpick Hotel, Muharraq.
"The GCC grid is already operational with five
of the countries having joined," he said.
"The sixth, Oman, will be joining shortly and
that will complete the grid."
Dr Al Awadi said Saudi Arabia will then be linked
to Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan, Iraq, Egypt
and Libya.
"Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia will join in
soon, after which the Arab Power Grid will be completed," Dr
Al Awadhi said.
He said a direct power link between the Arab world
and Europe would then become possible since there
would be a link between Morocco and Spain.
"We can then anticipate power sharing between
the Arab world and Europe, with us getting power
from them in the summer and them getting it from
us in the winter," Dr Al Awadhi added.
The official said the GCC power grid had already
proved to be a huge success in the last two years
when Bahrain had used it to counteract power shortages.
Dr Al Awadhi revealed the first phase of the Al
Dur Power Plant would soon be operational after which
Bahrain would have sufficient power for the next
four years.
He said the second, third and fourth phases of the
plant would go on stream shortly afterwards.
"The present Sitra power plant would also be
upgraded and modernised in the next few years," said
Dr Al Awadhi.
Earlier, plant operator Hidd Power Company (HPC)
executive managing director Andrew Biffen said officials
planned to set up schemes to train Bahrainis to take
up graduate positions.
"We have a 55 per cent Bahrainisation rate,
which we expect to maintain and even increase," he
said.
The company was set up with an investment of $1.2
billion (BD453 million) in July 2006 after the ownership
of the Bahrain government-operated Hidd Power Plant
was transferred to a consortium of International
Power and Sumitomo Corporation.
Since then it has produced more than 22,000,000
Mega Watt hours of electricity and more than 100
billion gallons of water for Bahrain.
The plant generates electricity and steam by burning
natural gas in five large gas turbines and related
heat recovery boilers. The steam is then used to
power water distillation vessels which convert sea
water into high quality drinking water.
The plant has an electrical capacity of 1000MW,
equivalent to 1.34m horsepower and can produce 90m
gallons of drinking water per day.
The plant contributes 992MW to the national power
grid of a total installed capacity of 2,797MW, with
the rest being contributed by Al Ezzel, Riffa, Sitra
and Muharraq.
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