Olkaria I Geothermal Power Station Explained

Olkaria I Geothermal Power Station
Location Map Caption:Map of Kenya showing the location of Olkaria I Geothermal Power Station
Coordinates:-0.8931°N 36.3089°W
Country:Kenya
Location:Olkaria, Nakuru County
Status:O
Commissioned:1981 (unit 1)
1982 (unit 2)
1985 (unit 3)
2014 (unit 4)
2015 (unit 5)
2022 (unit 6)
Owner:KenGen
Ps Units Operational:3 x 15 MW
2 x 70 MW
1 x 83.3 MW

The Olkaria I Geothermal Power Station, also known as Olkaria I Geothermal Power Plant is a geothermal power station in Kenya, with an installed capacity of .[1] [2]

Location

The facility is located in the Hell's Gate National Park along with its sister stations, Olkaria II and Olkaria III. This location lies in Olkaria, in Nakuru County, on the eastern edge of the Eastern Rift Valley, approximately 40km (30miles), by road, southwest of Naivasha, the nearest large town. Olkaria is approximately 121km (75miles), by road, northwest of Nairobi.

Overview

Olkaria I Geothermal Power Station is one in a series of six geothermal power stations, clustered in the Olkaria area in Nakuru County. Four of the stations Olkaria I, Olkaria II, Olkaria III and Olkaria IV were operational, as of September 2017. As of 2020, the entire Olkaria complex had an installed capacity of 810.3 MW[3] [4] Olkaria V is under construction and Olkaria VI is planned for 2021.[5]

History

The Olkaria I Power Station first started operation in 1981 running one Mitsubishi turbine with a generation capacity of 15MW. In 1982 and 1985, two more turbines identical to the first were commissioned at the facility, bringing the total generation capacity to 45MW.[6] As of January 2015 unit 4 and 5 with a combined installed capacity of 140 Megawatts were inaugurated.[7] This brings the total installed capacity of Olkaria I to 185 Megawatts.[2]

In March 2016, the government of Kenya borrowed KSh9.53 billion (US$95 million), from the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) to refurbish turbines 1, 2 and 3 at Olkaria I. The works includes increasing the combined capacity of the three turbines from 45MW to 50.7MW. The rehabilitation and upgrade works are expected to last until 2021. This will increase capacity at this power station from to .[8]

In December 2018, Kenya Electricity Generating Company broke ground for the construction of Unit 6 of Olkaria I Geothermal Power Station, with capacity of 83 megawatts. Completion of this unit was expected in 2021, bringing total capacity at this geothermal station to .[9] Unit 6 of Olkaria I, was commercially commissioned in July 2022.[1]

Ownership

Olkaria I Power Station is owned by KenGen, a Nairobi Stock Exchange - listed company, in which the government of Kenya maintains 70 percent shareholding, the remaining 30 percent being held by institutional and private investors.[2] [10]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kenya: Unit 6 of the Olkaria I geothermal power plant is operational . Afrik21.africa . 18 July 2022 . Jean Marie Takouleu . 18 July 2022 . Paris, France.
  2. Web site: Power Magazine . Olkaria Geothermal Expansion Project, Rift Valley Province, Kenya . 26 September 2017 . 12 January 2015 . Sonal Patel.
  3. Web site: . KenGen starts new round of steam wells' drilling . 27 December 2011 . David Herbling . 18 July 2022 . Nairobi, Kenya.
  4. Web site: Geothermal plant adds 280MW to Kenya grid . 13 December 2014 . 26 September 2017 . Nairobi . . The EastAfrican.
  5. Web site: Renewable Energy World . KenGen Plans Olkaria V Geothermal Project . 10 January 2017 . 26 September 2017 . Renewable Energy World.
  6. Web site: Profile of Olkaria I Geothermal Power Station . 26 September 2017 . 2017 . Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) . KenGen . Nairobi.
  7. Web site: 19 February 2015 . President Paul Kagame Inaugurates Olkaria I Units 4 & 5 . 26 September 2017 . Geosteam Kenya . Administrator . Nairobi.
  8. Web site: Neville . Otuki . Japan pumps Sh9.53bn into Kenya's oldest geothermal plant . . 16 March 2018 . 17 March 2018 . Nairobi . https://web.archive.org/web/20180727080207/https://www.businessdailyafrica.com/news/Kenya-to-rehabilitate-oldest-geothermal-power-plant/539546-4344430-13pp7mtz/index.html . 27 July 2018 . dead .
  9. Web site: KenGen set to break ground for geothermal plant today . . 3 December 2018 . 3 December 2018 . Sam Kiplagat . Nairobi.
  10. Web site: KenGen sells five per cent stake to South Africans for Sh2.3 billion . 23 February 2017 . 26 September 2017 . Victor . Juma . Nairobi. Business Daily Africa.