Difference between revisions of "Gardabani power station"

From SourceWatch
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 16: Line 16:
 
On 30 June 2016 an amendment was made for the construction of one thermal coal plant, in Gardabani instead of Tkibuli.<ref name=ga>[http://greenalt.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Gardabani-_coal_fired_eng_2016.pdf "Gardabani coal-fired thermal power plant and associated problems,"] Green Alternative and Bankwatch report, 2016</ref> GIG said the "alternative location was decided after the company considered the findings of geological and environmental studies." The coal plant is planned to be 300 MW.<ref name=gig>[http://www.gig.ge/?lang=en&page=giec-pineline "Projects in Pipeline,"] GIG, accessed May 2017</ref>
 
On 30 June 2016 an amendment was made for the construction of one thermal coal plant, in Gardabani instead of Tkibuli.<ref name=ga>[http://greenalt.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Gardabani-_coal_fired_eng_2016.pdf "Gardabani coal-fired thermal power plant and associated problems,"] Green Alternative and Bankwatch report, 2016</ref> GIG said the "alternative location was decided after the company considered the findings of geological and environmental studies." The coal plant is planned to be 300 MW.<ref name=gig>[http://www.gig.ge/?lang=en&page=giec-pineline "Projects in Pipeline,"] GIG, accessed May 2017</ref>
  
In March 2017 it was reported that GIG plans for construction on the 300 MW coal plant in Gardabani to begin by the fall,<ref>[http://cbw.ge/business/c-power-preparing-construction-thermal-power-plant-gardabani/ "C-Power is Preparing for Construction of Thermal Power Plant,"] cbw.ge, Mar 22, 2017</ref> although as of November 2017 there are no reports that construction has begun.  
+
In March 2017 it was reported that GIG plans for construction on the 300 MW coal plant in Gardabani to begin by the fall.<ref>[http://cbw.ge/business/c-power-preparing-construction-thermal-power-plant-gardabani/ "C-Power is Preparing for Construction of Thermal Power Plant,"] cbw.ge, Mar 22, 2017</ref>  
 +
 
 +
In November 2017 Dongfang Electric Corporation and Georgian Industrial Group's CPower signed a US$250 million contract for construction on the 300 MW coal plant to begin in 2018 and commissioning in 2020.<ref>[http://www.gig.ge/uploads/2017-11-29/829-NOEMBERI-XELMOCERA%20eng.pdf "Agreement was signed between Cpower and Dongfang Electric Corporation,"] Dongfang press release, Nov 29, 2017</ref> 
  
 
==Public opposition==
 
==Public opposition==

Revision as of 22:13, 15 May 2018

{{#badges:CoalSwarm}}Gardabani power station is a proposed 300-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant in Kvemo Kartli, Georgia.

There is also a 300 MW gas plant operating at Gardabani, and a new 250-300 MW gas and 100 MW hydro project planned there.[1]

Location

The map below shows the approximate location of the project, in the town of Gardabani.

Background on Plant

In 2012 the Georgian Industrial Group (GIG) said it had signed a contract with the Turkish company Mimsam to construct a 160 MW coal power station in Gardabani, near the border to Azerbaijan. The power station will be fed with domestically produced coal from a mine in Tkibuli in the west of the country.[2]

In September 2015, Chinese state-owned Dongfang Electric Corporation pledged $180-$200 million for construction of a 150 MW coal plant in Tkibuli, in Georgia’s western Imreti region. The offer was made at a meeting between Georgia’s Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili and Dongfang representatives, shortly prior to the World Economic Forum in China.[3]

On October 16, 2015, an agreement was signed between the Georgian Government and Tkibuli-150 for the construction of a 150-300 MW coal-fired power plant in Tkibuli municipality. Under the agreement, construction should start no later than 30 September 2016 and be finished before 1 January 2020.[4]

On 30 June 2016 an amendment was made for the construction of one thermal coal plant, in Gardabani instead of Tkibuli.[4] GIG said the "alternative location was decided after the company considered the findings of geological and environmental studies." The coal plant is planned to be 300 MW.[1]

In March 2017 it was reported that GIG plans for construction on the 300 MW coal plant in Gardabani to begin by the fall.[5]

In November 2017 Dongfang Electric Corporation and Georgian Industrial Group's CPower signed a US$250 million contract for construction on the 300 MW coal plant to begin in 2018 and commissioning in 2020.[6]

Public opposition

According to a 2016 Green Alternative and Bankwatch report, the project has not received environmental clearance, and has been opposed by locals over pollution concerns, as gas plants are already operating and planned in the town.[4]

Project Details

  • Sponsor: Georgian International Electric Corporation
  • Parent company:
  • Location: Gardabani, Kvemo Kartli, Georgia
  • Coordinates: 41.45, 45.1 (approximate)
  • Status: Announced
  • Gross Capacity: 300 MW
  • Type: Subcritical
  • Projected in service: 2020
  • Coal Type:
  • Coal Source: Tkibuli, Georgia
  • Source of financing: Dongfang Electric Corporation from Chinese banks

Articles and resources

References

Related SourceWatch articles

External resources