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Geothermal Plant Gets Go-Ahead
Tito Summa Siahaan | April 05, 2013
Darajat Geothermal Power Plant. Mount Darajat, West Java - Indonesia.
Twenty years after the plans were first drawn up, construction is set to soon commence in North Sumatra on the $1.5 billion Sarulla Geothermal Power Project, the largest of its type in the world, following a deal reached by key players in the energy sector in Jakarta on Thursday.
State-controlled utility Perusahaan Listrik Negara signed a deal with Pertamina Geothermal Energy, a subsidiary of state-controlled energy company Pertamina, and a consortium led by private-equity controlled Medco Power.
The facility will have the capacity of 330 megawatts, making it the world’s largest geothermal generator.
The facility will be built in three stages, and is expected to be fully operational in 2018. .
PLN said it will price the electricity generated from the power plant at 6.79 cents per kilowatt hour, after a revision to a price deal struck in 2010. PLN president director Nur Pamudji said the company “hopes that the construction of this geothermal power plant can commence as soon as possible, so that it can contribute to sustainable and environmental-friendly development.”
Geothermal energy seeks to harness energy contained in the earth.
Medco Power president director Fazil E. Alfitri said the project would provide clean energy for Indonesia. “Medco Power is committed to becoming a national company that is a strategic government partner to fulfill national electricity demand,” he said.
Medco Power holds a 37 percent stake in the $1.5 billion project, while Japanese companies Itochu and Kyushu Electric control 25 percent each. US-based Ormat Technologies owns the remaining 13 percent.
Medco Power is 51 percent owned by Saratoga Capital, co-founded by businessman Sandiaga Uno. The remaining 49 percent is controlled by Medco Internasional, the country’s largest listed oil and gas firm.
The Sarulla plant has been on the drawing board since 1993, but construction has never commenced due because of a variety of problems. Pertamina and PLN had created a joint venture, Geo Dipa, to build the plant, but Geo Dipa pulled out after failing to secure necessary funding to build the plant, paving the way for the Medco-led consortium.
The consortium and PLN then took another four years before the earlier price deal was signed in 2010. After that, there was another technical constraint that put construction on hold.
Earlier plans to develop Sarulla relied on a regulation that stated that all identified geothermal assets needed to stay under Pertamina’s control.
In February, the Finance Ministry issued a new regulation allowing Pertamina to transfer its geothermal assets to be developed by a joint operating body.
Indonesia, located on two volcanic chains, is said to hold 40 percent of the world’s geothermal energy potential, with feasible annual generating capacity of more than 29,000 megawatts. But so far only 4 percent of Indonesia’s geothermal potential has been exploited.
Tito Summa Siahaan | April 05, 2013
Darajat Geothermal Power Plant. Mount Darajat, West Java - Indonesia.
Twenty years after the plans were first drawn up, construction is set to soon commence in North Sumatra on the $1.5 billion Sarulla Geothermal Power Project, the largest of its type in the world, following a deal reached by key players in the energy sector in Jakarta on Thursday.
State-controlled utility Perusahaan Listrik Negara signed a deal with Pertamina Geothermal Energy, a subsidiary of state-controlled energy company Pertamina, and a consortium led by private-equity controlled Medco Power.
The facility will have the capacity of 330 megawatts, making it the world’s largest geothermal generator.
The facility will be built in three stages, and is expected to be fully operational in 2018. .
PLN said it will price the electricity generated from the power plant at 6.79 cents per kilowatt hour, after a revision to a price deal struck in 2010. PLN president director Nur Pamudji said the company “hopes that the construction of this geothermal power plant can commence as soon as possible, so that it can contribute to sustainable and environmental-friendly development.”
Geothermal energy seeks to harness energy contained in the earth.
Medco Power president director Fazil E. Alfitri said the project would provide clean energy for Indonesia. “Medco Power is committed to becoming a national company that is a strategic government partner to fulfill national electricity demand,” he said.
Medco Power holds a 37 percent stake in the $1.5 billion project, while Japanese companies Itochu and Kyushu Electric control 25 percent each. US-based Ormat Technologies owns the remaining 13 percent.
Medco Power is 51 percent owned by Saratoga Capital, co-founded by businessman Sandiaga Uno. The remaining 49 percent is controlled by Medco Internasional, the country’s largest listed oil and gas firm.
The Sarulla plant has been on the drawing board since 1993, but construction has never commenced due because of a variety of problems. Pertamina and PLN had created a joint venture, Geo Dipa, to build the plant, but Geo Dipa pulled out after failing to secure necessary funding to build the plant, paving the way for the Medco-led consortium.
The consortium and PLN then took another four years before the earlier price deal was signed in 2010. After that, there was another technical constraint that put construction on hold.
Earlier plans to develop Sarulla relied on a regulation that stated that all identified geothermal assets needed to stay under Pertamina’s control.
In February, the Finance Ministry issued a new regulation allowing Pertamina to transfer its geothermal assets to be developed by a joint operating body.
Indonesia, located on two volcanic chains, is said to hold 40 percent of the world’s geothermal energy potential, with feasible annual generating capacity of more than 29,000 megawatts. But so far only 4 percent of Indonesia’s geothermal potential has been exploited.