Duyen Hai Power Generation Complex
{{#Badges:CoalSwarm|Navbar-Vietnamcoal}} Duyên Hải Power Generation Complex is a 4,305 megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant complex under development in Trà Vinh province, Vietnam.
Contents
Location
The project is located in the Duyên Hải Power Generation Complex, in the Duyên Hải district of Trà Vinh province.[1] Duyên Hải-1 is to the southwest, Duyên Hải-2 on the northeast, and Duyên Hải-3 is in the center.[2]
Background
The planned power plant complex would be made up of three separate coal-fired power plants: Duyên Hải 1, 2, and 3. The first two are made up of two units each, and the third is made up of three units.
In April 2013, construction began on a US$280 million coal seaport, the Duyen Hai coal port, for the power complex. The seaport is being built by China Communications Construction, and is expected to be completed in late 2015; it will be capable of handling 12 million tons of coal per year for consumption at the complex's three power plants.[3]
Duyên Hải-1
The 1,245-MW Duyên Hải-1 is a project of Vietnam Electricity Group (the successor company of the state-owned power monopoly). The construction contractor is the Chinese company Dongfeng Group, and the plant will cost $1.6 billion. Duyên Hải-1 broke ground in Sept. 2010.[4] The two 622-MW units are both expected to enter service in July 2015.[5]
Unit 1 was successfully brought online in January 2015,[6] and Unit 2 in April 2015.[7] The plant entered into commercial operation in June 2015.[8]
(The revised Power Development Plan VII lists Unit 1 at 600 MW with an operating year of 2014, and Unit 2 at 600 MW with an operating year of 2015.[9])
Duyên Hải-2
The 1,200-MW Duyên Hải-2 is a project of the Malaysian company Teknik Janakuasa, a subsidiary of the MMC Corporation Berhad, and will cost $2.2 billion.[10] In April 2011, Janakuasa signed Chinese company Huadian Engineering to take the lead in construction.[11] In 2009, Janakuasa stated that construction would begin in 2010-11, and the plant would be completed in 2014; however, several years of delays apparently followed.
In December 2014, Janakuasa and the Vietnamese government reached preliminary agreement on a build-operate-transfer (BOT) contract to build the plant. The project still needs an investment license to proceed. The current plan is for completion in 2020.[12]
Duyên Hải-2 was permitted in September 2015. Alstom will join Teknik Janakuasa as the main equipment supplier.[13]
Construction of Duyen Hai 2 began in August 2016. It will cover an area of 60 hectares, and is estimated at US$2.2 billion. It is planned for operation in 2021.[14] In June 2019 the completion date for Unit 2 was delayed to 2022 in the Ministry Of Industry And Trade's report on the implementation of the revised seventh Power Development Plan (PDP7).[15]
Duyên Hải-3 (2 x 622.5 MW) and Duyên Hải-3 Extension (660 MW)
The 1,245-MW Duyên Hải-3 is a project of Electricity of Vietnam (EVN). In August 2011, the engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contract for Units 1 & 2 was awarded to a consortium of Chinese companies: Chengda Engineering, Dongfang Electric Corporation, the Southwest Electric Power Design Institute (SWEPDI) (a subsidiary of the China Energy Engineering Group), and Zhejiang Electric Power Construction. The project will cost $1.5 billion, and initial preparation work began in Sept. 2010. [16][17] Construction began in December 2012.[18] Completion of Unit 1 is scheduled for Q4 2015, and Unit 2 for Q2 2016.
In November 2014, the EPC contract was signed between EVN and Sumitomo Corporation for construction of the 660-MW, $890 million coal-fired Unit 3 of Duyên Hải-3 (called "Duyên Hải-3 Extension"). Construction began in December, and is scheduled to be completed by June 2018.[19][20]
In March 2015, the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) approved a US$410 million loan for the coal plant, and Nippon Export and Investment Insurance (NEXI) an additional US$275 million.[21]
Also in March 2015, Toshiba Corporation announced that it had been contracted to provide the turbine for Unit 3.[22] In May 2015, Sumitomo contracted Black & Veatch as project technical lead in May 2015.[23]
In April 2015 state utility Vietnam Electricity Group secured a syndicated loan worth US$209 million for Duyen Hai 3 from three domestic lenders: VietinBank, BIDV, and Vietcombank.[24]
The revised Power Development Plan VII lists Phase 3 Unit 1 at 600 MW with a 2016 completion date, Unit 2 at 600 MW with a 2017 completion, and the Extension at 660 MW with a completion of 2019.[9]
Commissioning of unit 1 began in September 2016, with full operation planned by December 2016.[25] Trial operation began December 2016.[26]
Unit 1 entered commercial operation in March 2017, and Unit 2 in April 2017.[27] A completion date for the extension unit is unknown.
Duyên Hải-3 Extension will use supercritical combustion technology.[28]
In March 2018 a fire broke out at the unit 3 construction site and destroyed 70% of a flue gas desulfurisation tower that was under construction.[29]
In August 2018 an audit of the Duyên Hải-3 project found that EVN had underestimated the project's cost by 8.8 billion Vietnamese Dong (VND).[30]
Environmental Impact
78 households were resettled to the nearby Mu U Resettlement area in 2010 to make room for the plant — but severe land erosion caused by the loss of sand dunes that have been removed to build the coal port means that the land that people have been resettled to now regularly becomes flooded. Local residents' protests to government officials have led to a plan to resettle these impacted residents again, to the Con Trung Resettlement Area. Many families in the area report that they are unable to grow anything without the protection of the sand dunes, and that their land has become worthless with the repeated flooding.[31]
In May 2017, Politburo member Nguyễn Thiện Nhân visited the Duyen Hai plant. While stating its importance for the regional economy, he also acknowledged that local people were very concerned about the plant's environmental impact.[32]
Project Details
- Sponsor: Vietnam Electricity Group (Duyên Hải-1 and Duyên Hải-3); Teknik Janakuasa (Duyên Hải-2)
- Parent company: Vietnam Electricity Group, (Duyên Hải-1 and Duyên Hải-3); MMC Corporation Berhad (Duyên Hải-2)
- Location: Dan Thanh commune, Duyên Hải district, Trà Vinh province, Vietnam
- Coordinates: 9.58517, 106.52809 (exact)[2]
- Status:
- Duyên Hải-1: Operating
- Duyên Hải-2: Construction
- Duyên Hải-3, Units 1-2: Operating; Duyên Hải-3, Unit 3: Construction
- Gross Capacity: 4,305 MW
- Type: Supercritical/Subcritical
- In service:
- Coal Type: Bituminous
- Coal Source: Imported (Duyên Hải-2)[12]
- Source of financing:
- Duyen Hai-2: Export-Import Bank of China[33]
Articles and resources
References
- ↑ "Fichtner Projects," Spinwell Global website, accessed November 2013
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Nhà máy nhiệt điện Duyên Hải 1, Nhà máy nhiệt điện Duyên Hải 2, and nhà máy nhiệt điện Duyên Hải 3, Wikimapia, accessed Apr. 2015.
- ↑ Construction Starts on Duyen Hai Seaport, Viêt Nam News, April 22, 2013.
- ↑ "New thermal power plant built in Tra Vinh", Vietnam Business Register, accessed Jan. 2014.
- ↑ Dong, Minh. Starting Pouring the First Concrete Batch for Gas Furnace of Duyen Hai 1 Thermal Power Plant, Trà Vinh provincial website, accessed Jan. 2014.
- ↑ The unit # 1 of the Duyen Hai 1 Thermal Power Plant (TPP) has synchronized to the National Power System, Vietnam Energy, 4 Feb. 2015.
- ↑ Tổ máy 2 của Nhà máy điện Duyên Hải 1 hòa vào lưới điện quốc gia, Vietnam+, 1 May 2015.
- ↑ Nhiệt điện Duyên Hải 1: Sẽ vận hành thương mại trong tháng 6/2015, Bao Cong Thuong, 24 May 2015.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 DANH MỤC CÁC DỰ ÁN NGUỒN ĐIỆN VÀO VẬN HÀNH GIAI ĐOẠN 2016 - 2030, Ban hành kèm theo Quyết định số 428/QĐ-TTg ngày 18 tháng 3 năm 2016 của Thủ tướng Chính phủ (LIST OF POWER PROJECT IN OPERATION PERIOD 2016 - 2030, Issued together with Decision No. 428 / QD - TTg of March 18, 2016 by the Prime Minister)
- ↑ "Power plant project signs on consultant", Viêt Nam News, Jan. 8, 2009.
- ↑ Công ty Huadian Engineering của Trung Quốc đã hỗ trợ Janakasa tới 1,59 tỷ USD để thực hiện dự án này, Cafe F, April 20, 2011.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Malaysia's Janakuasa, Vietnam reach deal on 1,200 MW power plant, Reuters UK, 26 Dec. 2014.
- ↑ "Malaysia’s Teknik Janakuasa gets nod to build $2bn power plant in Vietnam," Tuoi Tre News, 09/29/2015
- ↑ "Work begins on Duyen Hai 2 thermal power plant," Vinacomin, 05/08/2016
- ↑ Implementation of Power Projects iIn the Revised Power Development Plan 7, Ministry of Industry and Trade, Republic of Vietnam, Jun. 4, 2019
- ↑ Chinese Firms Get $1.3 bln Power Plant Deal in Vietnam, Reuters, Aug. 5, 2011.
- ↑ EPC contract signing ceremony of Duyen Hai 3 power plant, EVN press release, 12 Aug. 2011.
- ↑ Starting construction of Duyen Hai 3 Thermal Power Plant, Tra Vinh Provincial Government press release, 18 Dec. 2012.
- ↑ Construction begins on Duyen Hai 3 power plant extension, Vietnam+, 13 Dec. 2014.
- ↑ Signing EPC Contract for Duyen Hai 3 Power Thermal Plant Extension Project, Vietnam Energy, 27 Nov. 2014.
- ↑ "List of Coal Power Plants funded by JBIC (2003-2015)," Sekitan, April 2015
- ↑ Toshiba to Supply Steam Turbine and Generator for Duyen Hai 3 Extension Coal-fired Power Plant in Vietnam, Toshiba press release, 16 Mar. 2015.
- ↑ Black & Veatch secures role on Vietnam EPC power project expansion, Black & Veatch press release, 4 May 2015.
- ↑ "VietinBank arranges $209 mln loan for thermal power plant," Reuters, Apr 21, 2015
- ↑ "Turbine of Duyen Hai 3 thermal power plant joins national grid," Vietnam Pictorial, 19/09/2016
- ↑ "Duyen Hai power plant produces 5.9 billion kWh of electricity," Vietnam Net, Dec 28, 2016
- ↑ Toàn bộ Nhà máy Nhiệt điện Duyên Hải 3 đã được vận hành, VnMedia, 17 Apr. 2017.
- ↑ "Order Received for construction of Duyen Hai 3 Extension Coal-fired Power Plant (1 x 688MW) from Vietnamese State-run Power Company," Sumitomo Company press release, 26 November 2014
- ↑ Power plant fire allegedly caused by human error, Viet Nam News, Mar. 9, 2018
- ↑ Kiến nghị xử lý 2.000 tỷ đồng tại dự án nhiệt điện lớn nhất ĐBSCL, VN Express, Aug. 16, 2018
- ↑ Hoang Duong, Coal-power complex brings misery and ecological risk to local people in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, Mekong Commons, 2 Nov. 2014.
- ↑ Ông Nguyễn Thiện Nhân kiểm tra nhà máy Nhiệt điện Duyên Hải, Zing.vn, 12 May 2017.
- ↑ "Duyen Hai 2 Thermal Power Plant," World Bank, accessed Oct 2018