
Iran, Iraq ink electricity contract: report
Dec 20, 2011 - Xinhua - pro.energycentral.com
Iran signed contracts with Iraq to cooperate in
the latter's electricity sector, the official IRNA
news agency reported Tuesday.
Iraqi Ministry of Electricity has signed a 72-million-U.S.
dollar contract with Iranian Sanir company, according
to an announcement released Tuesday, quoted by IRNA.
Sanir is due to construct two gas-powered units
for Dibris power plant in Kirkuk in northeastern
Iraq in order to increase the country's electricity
capacity by 320 megawatts (MW) within 14 months.
Other electricity contracts worth 69.8 million dollars
have been signed between the Iraqi ministry and other
Iranian companies to double the power generation
capacity of Sadr power plant in Baghdad within 12
months, IRNA said without specifying the date and
locus of signing the contracts.
In November, Majid Salehi, managing director of
Iran Power Development Company, said that Tehran
and Baghdad have agreed to finish an electricity
transfer line connecting Iran's Karkheh dam to al-Emara
in Iraq, which will take 1,000 MW of electricity
to the Iraqi city every year.
The capacity can be further increased to 1,150 MW
upon the request of the Iraqi side.
According to the local satellite Press TV, Iran
had a total annual electricity generation capacity
of 63,403 MW by November.
Iran currently exchanges electricity with countries
including Afghanistan, Armenia, Iraq, Pakistan, Turkey
and Turkmenistan.
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