Gurara II Hydroelectric Power Station | |
Dam Crosses: | Gurara River |
Location: | Kagarko, Kaduna State, Nigeria |
Dam Type: | Gravity dam |
Construction Began: | 2023 Expected |
Opening: | 2026 Expected |
Cost: | US$1.24 billion |
Owner: | Federal Government of Nigeria |
Plant Turbines: | 6 |
Plant Capacity: | 360MW |
Plant Annual Gen: | 1,130 GWh |
Location Map: | Nigeria#Africa#World |
Location Map Caption: | Location of Gurara II Power Station Placement on map is approximate |
Coordinates: | 9.6139°N 7.6919°W |
The Gurara II Power Station is a proposed 360 megawatts hydroelectric power station across the Gurara River in Nigeria. The power station is owned and is under development by the Federal Government of Nigeria. The Exim Bank of China has agreed to lend US$1 billion towards the construction of this renewable energy project. The Nigerian Federal Executive Council accepted that offer in May 2019.[1] [2]
The power station is separate from the 30 MW Gurara I Hydroelectric Power Station that crosses the same river and was under development by a concessionaire, as of May 2021.[3]
The power station would lie across the Gurara River, downstream of the 30 megawatts Gurara I Hydroelectric Power Station. This is near the settlement of Kagarko, in Kaduna State, located in North-West Nigeria.[4]
Kagarko is located approximately 148km (92miles), by road, south of Kaduna metropolis of the state capital. This is about 92km (57miles) northeast of Abuja, the capital city of Nigeria.
The design calls for generation capacity of 360 Mega Watts. A penstock pipe measuring 100m (300feet) in length and 4.4m (14.4feet) in diameter will direct water from the reservoir to the generation turbines inside the power house. The dam and power station will be built in one phase. When completed, the power station is expected to supply 1,130 Giga-Watts per hour of clean renewable energy to the Nigerian grid, annually.[2]
As of December 2021, this power station was owned by the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Water Resources.[2]
It has been reported that construction of this power station is expected to cost US$1.240 billion. The table below illustrates the expected sources of funding for the construction of the project.[1] [2]
1 | |||
2 | Government of Nigeria | ||
Total | |||
Groundbreaking is expected in 2023 and commercial commissioning is anticipated in 2026.[2]