What's new

MAPNA Group Unveils MGT-70 (3), Its Latest E-class Gas Turbine

.
IMG_20170710_164658.jpg
 
.
MAPNA is one of the groups to be proud of ...

what a resourceful company! they have so many talents there.

@Serpentine can your specialties be helpful for them?

Bro I'm working in polymer field of materials science, I don't think working as a turbine specialist would be my specialty even though I'm studying materials science and know a thing or two about turbines, super alloys or single crystals.
 
. . . .
They are calling themselves "Moderator" , "Reformist" ... the losers in power ...

نظرتون در باره ی ماجرای رشوه ی 365 میلیون دلاری توتال چیه !؟
Uhuh, and can you show me which government official said he/she wants to close MAPNA?

نشنیدم.
 
.
Uhuh, and can you show me which government official said he/she wants to close MAPNA?

نشنیدم.
Not directly but indirectly .... When they want to give all projects to foreign companies , then it means Mapna will become bankpourt ....
 
. .
Riiight...

So is MAPNA going bankrupt?

when they don't sign any new contract with MAPNA , the company will get bankrupt in couple of years .... MAPNA is a company and it should have "INCOME" to live and evolve ...
 
.
when they don't sign any new contract with MAPNA , the company will get bankrupt in couple of years .... MAPNA is a company and it should have "INCOME" to live and evolve ...
So the answer is no...

1 phase of South Pars went to Total... meanwhile, MAPNA is doing multiple phases right now.
 
.
MAPNA has exported around 2.5-3.5 billion $ worth Gas turbines to Iraq during 2015-2017:
This is old news but it worth a review


Al-Sadr Gas Power Plant in Baghdad.
  1. Energy
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
MAPNA-Built Power Plant in Basra to Start Partial Output
The 3,000 MW power plant is expected to ease electricity shortage in the war-torn Arab country which is fighting an insurgency led by the so-called Islamic State


Apower plant in the southern Iraqi city of Basra that is being built in cooperation with Iran's MAPNA Group will partially come on stream in the Iranian fiscal year that starts next March, Abbas Aliabadi, the group's managing director said.

MAPNA signed a $2.5 billion contract last year with Shamara Group, an Iraqi consortium of 14 industrial and energy companies, to build a 3,000-megawatt power plant in Basra, known as Rumaila Combined-Cycle Power Plant, in four years.

"We are now installing two (gas) turbines in the Rumaila plant which will start power generation next year," Aliabadi said without elaborating on the time of inauguration, ILNA reported.

The combined-cycle power plant, which will consist of 12 gas turbines and six steam turbines, is named after Iraq's super giant Rumaila Oilfield near the Kuwaiti border.

The official added that the power project has four phases. "The Rumaila power plant is the biggest technical project in the Middle East which will increase Iraq's total power generation capacity by 20%."

Combined-cycle power plants normally use both gas and steam turbines to produce up to 50% more electricity from the same fuel than traditional units.

In the first step, gas turbines are to be installed and integrated with Iraq's power grid, and then the steam units will be installed, according to a statement on MAPNA's website.

The government in Baghadad has given guarantees that it will purchase electricity from Rumaila for 15 years as per the contract.

MAPNA Group is a conglomerate of Iranian companies involved in development and execution of thermal and renewable power, oil and gas, railroad transportation and other industrial projects as well as manufacturing equipment.

The deal with the Iraqis was signed in July 2015, shortly after Iran and the six world powers (the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany) announced a historic agreement on scaling back international sanctions against Tehran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program.

MAPNA supplies equipment, including gas and steam turbines and boilers besides engineering and supervising the project.

It has implemented power projects in Iraq in the past, namely the construction of a power plant in Najaf and the Al-Sadr Gas Power Plant in Baghdad.

The 3,000 MW power plant is expected to ease electricity shortage in the war-torn Arab country which is fighting an insurgency led by the so-called Islamic State. The terrorist group has seized swathes of land in Iraq's northern regions since 2013.

The Iraqi people have frequently taken to the streets in recent years to protest at poor public facilities and services, including day-long power outages in Baghdad and other cities that exacerbate in summer when demand for electricity to power cooling systems in the sweltering summer of above 50 degrees Celsius hits peak levels.
 
. .
.

Exactly! If monopoly is such a good thing then all Iranians must be mighty proud of Iran khodro and saipa. I think they produce the best weapons in Iran, as they have more kills on their hardware then any other Iranian organization, whether private or state owned.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom