Nengo Bridge Hydroelectric Power Station Explained

Nengo Bridge Hydroelectric Power Station
Location Map:Uganda
Location Map Caption:Map of Uganda showing the location of
Nengo Bridge
Coordinates:-0.815°N 29.8333°W
Country:Uganda
Location:Nengo Bridge, Rukungiri District
Status:P
Owner:Jacobsen Elekro
Dam Crosses:Mirera River
Res Elevation:1150m (3,770feet)
Plant Commission:2017 (Expected)
Plant Type:R
Plant Capacity:6.7MW

Nengo Bridge Hydroelectric Power Station, often referred to as Nengo Bridge Power Station is a planned mini-hydroelectric power station in Uganda, the third-largest economy in the East African Community.

Location

The power station is located across the Mirera River between Rukungiri District and Kanungu District at the location of Nengo Bridge, along the road between Rukungiri and Kanungu.[1] This location lies approximately 13km (08miles), by road, southwest of Rukungiri.[2]

Overview

Nengo Bridge Power Station is run of the river, mini-hydropower installation, with planned capacity of 6.7 MW.[3] Jacobsen Elektro, a Norwegian power development company, through its Ugandan subsidiary, Jacobsen Elektro Uganda Limited, owns the development rights to the power station.[4] Jacobsen Elektro also owns the 50-Megawatt Namanve Thermal Power Station in Mukono District, which they developed in 2008.[5]

Construction costs

, the exact construction budget for the power plant and the high-tension power lines that will evacuate the generated electricity to where it will be integrated into the national grid is not publicly known. As a comparison, Kanungu Power Station with capacity of, was developed by a different company between 2008 and 2011 at a total cost of US$14 million.[6] Kanungu Power Station in the town of Kanungu, lies about, by road, southwest of Nengo Bridge.

Construction time table

The power station is one of the nine renewable energy projects in Uganda that were awarded production licenses in October 2014 by the Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERA). Construction is expected to start in December 2014, and last approximately two years.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kanungu District Cut Off As Nengo Bridge Collapses. 14 May 2012 . 23 October 2014 . Anthony . Kushaba . Uganda Radio Network (URN).
  2. Web site: Map Showing Rukungiri And Kanungu With Distance Marker . Globefeed.com . 23 October 2014.
  3. Web site: 64MW To Boost Power Grid, Avert Shortage . 17 December 2012. Nelson. 23 October 2014. Wesonga. Daily Monitor (Kampala).
  4. Web site: Eight Firms To Benefit From US$58 Million Renewable Energy Deal. 25 November 2013 . 23 October 2014 . Ibrahim . Kasita. New Vision (Kampala).
  5. Web site: Namanve 50MW Thermal Power Plant, Uganda . 5 November 2008 . 23 October 2014 . JEC . Jacobsen-Elektro.Com (JEC) . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131213132055/http://www.jacobsen-elektro.com/namanve_pp.htm . 13 December 2013 .
  6. Web site: 22 November 2011 . 23 October 2014 . Kanungu Mini-Hydro Dam Starts Work Today Amid Power Outages . Perez . Rumanzi. Daily Monitor (Kampala).
  7. Web site: ERA Licenses 9 Renewable Energy Projects . 22 October 2014 . 23 October 2014. Sanya. Samuel. New Vision (Kampala).