Harava Solar Power Station Explained

Harava Solar Power Station
Coordinates:-18.1169°N 31.2561°W
Country:Zimbabwe
Location:Bwoni, Seke Rural, Seke District
Status:UC
Construction Began:2019
Commissioned:2022 Expected
Cost:US$25 million
Owner:Harava Solar Limited
Solar Type:PV
Ps Units Operational:66000

The Harava Solar Power Station, is a solar power plant under construction in Zimbabwe. The project is owned and under development by Harava Solar Limited and entity owned by the Seke Community, in partnership with the Government of Zimbabwe. The energy generated here will be purchased by Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (ZESA), under a 25-year power purchase agreement (PPA).[1] [2]

Location

The power station sits on 28ha, near the community of Bwoni, in Seke Rural Constituency, in Seke District, Mashonaland East Province, approximately 47km (29miles), by road, southeast of Zimbabwe's capital city, Harare.[3] This solar farm lies approximately 11km (07miles), southeast of the diesel-fired Dema Thermal Power Station.

Overview

The power station has a capacity of 20 megawatts, to be sold directly to ZESA for integration into the national electricity grid. The electricity is evacuated via a new 10km (10miles), 132kV high voltage transmission line that transmits the power to the new 330kV substation at Dema Power Station, where it enters the national grid.[4]

Developers

The power station was developed by a special purpose vehicle company, Harava Solar Limited, specifically set up to develop, build and operate this solar power station. Harava Solar is a joint venture between the Seke Community and the Zimbabwean Ministry of Energy and Power Development.[4]

Construction timeline, costs and funding

The cost of construction was budgeted at US$25 million, fully funded by the Zimbabwean government.[4] The power station was expected to begin commercial operations in November 2021.[2]

Controversy

In the second half of 2019, Soventix SA of Germany, the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractor stopped paying eXess Africa of South Africa, a sub-contactor on the project. When negotiations failed the matter was taken to court, with eXess Africa demanding over US$1 million in unpaid claims for installed capacity of 6MW and a substation. Harava Solar is counterclaiming material (steel pipes) removed from the site by the subcontractor's officials, when payment was not forthcoming. Work on the power station stalled in 2021.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Harava Solar Project Hailed . . 21 May 2021 . Zimbabwe Herald . 7 March 2022 . Harare.
  2. Web site: Zimbabwe to switch on 20 MW Harava Solar Project in November . RenewAfrica.biz . 25 May 2021 . RenewAfrica.biz . 7 March 2022.
  3. Web site: Harava Solar Project Shines Light On Zimbabwe . 23 June 2020 . Talent Chimutambgi . 7 March 2022 . . Harare.
  4. Web site: 20MW Harava Solar Project 70 Per Cent Complete . Pindula Zimbabwe . 19 June 2020 . Pindula Zimbabwe . 7 March 2022 . Harare.
  5. Web site: . 12 August 2021 . SA businessman arrested in Zimbabwe over presidential solar plant project dispute . Times Live . 5 October 2022 . Johannesburg, South Africa.