Mubuku III Hydroelectric Power Station explained

Mubuku III Power Station
Location Map:Uganda
Location Map Caption:Map of Uganda showing the location of
Mubuku III Power Station
Coordinates:0.2603°N 30.1494°W
Country:Uganda
Location:Mubuku, Kasese District
Status:O
Owner:Kasese Cobalt Company Limited
Dam Crosses:Mubuku River
Res Elevation:1180m (3,870feet)
Plant Commission:2008
Plant Type:R
Plant Turbines:4
Plant Capacity:10MW

Mubuku III Power Station is a mini-hydroelectric power station in Uganda.

Location

The power station is located across the Mubuku River, near the town of Mubuku, Kasese District, in Western Uganda.[1] This location lies in the foothills of the Rwenzori Mountains, close to the border with the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Mubuku lies approximately, by road, north of Kasese, the location of the district headquarters, and the nearest large city.[2]

Overview

The Mubuku III Power Station, is a run of the river mini-hydropower installation, with installed capacity of 10 MW.[3] It became operational in 2008, having been built by Kasese Cobalt Company Limited, a company that extracts cobalt from the sludge left when copper is extracted out of copper ore. The excess power generated is sold to the national grid. Mubuku III Power Station is the third mini-hydropower station on River Mubuku. The other two are Mubuku I Power Station, owned and operated by Kilembe Mines Limited, with installed capacity of 5 MW and Mubuku II Power Station, also known as Bugoye Power Station, with capacity of 13 MW, owned by Tronder Power Limited, a Norwegian company.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kasese Cobalt Company Limited (KCCL). Mubuku III Power Station Is Located Near Mubuku, Kasese District . 7 May 2014.
  2. Web site: Map Showing Kasese And Mubuku With Distance Marker. Globefeed.com . 7 May 2014.
  3. Web site: MFC Industrial Limited: Results For The First Six Months Of 2013: Hydroelectric Power Station Update. 14 August 2013. 7 May 2014. MFC Industrial Limited (Canada).
  4. Web site: River Nyamwamba Spills Wrath. New Vision Mobile. 7 May 2014. B. Masereka. 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140505055843/http://www.newvision.co.ug/mobile/Detail.aspx?NewsID=642322&CatID=442. 5 May 2014.