Showing posts with label Electric Power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Electric Power. Show all posts

Friday, November 19, 2010

Tra Vinh has new thermo-electric power plant

Deputy Prime Minister Truong Vinh Trong on Sept. 19 issued an order to
build the Duyen Hai 1 thermo-electric power plant in the Mekong delta
province of Tra Vinh.


At the ground-breaking ceremony, Deputy PM Trong emphasised the significance of the project in socio-economic development.


The plant is part of the power centre which is expected to help boost
regional socio-economic development and attract more investors to Tra
Vinh province and the Mekong delta region as a whole, he said.


The deputy PM assigned the project’s investor, EVN, to ensure the
construction pace and asked local authorities to speed up site clearance
and pay attention to the living conditions of local people, especially
ethnic Khmer people.


He also said the Government
will build the Co Chien bridge in Tra Vinh province at the end of the
year and the construction of the bridge is expected to last for three
years.


Chairman of the Electricity of Vietnam (EVN)
Dao Van Hung said that this is one of three plants of the Duyen Hai
Power Centre which has a combined capacity of almost 4,500 MW and a
combined investment of around 5 billion USD.


The
1,245MW plant has an investment capital of 1.57 billion USD, of which 85
percent is sourced from the Import-Export Bank of China.


The first turbine of the plant is expected to be operational in September 2014 and the second two months later.


The plant will consume around 3.5 million tonnes of anthracite to produce around 7.2 billion kWh per year./.

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Sunday, August 29, 2010

Toshiba, MHI to join Japan nuclear mission to Vietnam

Toshiba, MHI to join Japan nuclear mission to VietnamToshiba Corp., Hitachi Ltd. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd., and Tokyo Electric Power Co. will send representatives on a government-led mission to Vietnam to sell nuclear technology.

Trade Minister Masayuki Naoshima plans to meet Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and other officials during the three-day visit, according to a ministry statement released in Tokyo Friday. The delegation will also include Kansai Electric Power Co. and Chubu Electric Power Co.

Japan, which lost out to South Korea in December on a $20 billion atomic contract with the United Arab Emirates, is competing in the expanding global reactor market with France, Russia, Canada, and the US. Prime Minister Naoto Kan is due to meet Dung at an Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in Hanoi in October as he seeks buyers for Japan’s infrastructure and technology exports.

“By going with all the executives, the Vietnamese government would understand how serious we are,” Tomoyoshi Yahagi, director of international nuclear energy cooperation office at the trade ministry, told reporters in Tokyo. “It may help to produce some results at the bilateral meeting.”

Russia’s state-run Rosatom Corp. has been selected to build the first of as many as 13 atomic plants planned in Vietnam by 2030.

Tokyo Electric and Toshiba together with other companies set up an office last month ahead of forming a joint nuclear export venture this autumn. Japan has begun preliminary talks with Vietnam for a atomic cooperation treaty, which would allow Japanese companies to export technology.

The delegation will include Tokyo Electric Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata, Toshiba President Norio Sasaki, Hitachi President Hiroaki Nakanishi, Mitsubishi Heavy Industry Chiarman Kazuo Tsukuda, Kansai Electric President Makoto Yagi, Chubu Electric President Akihisa Mizuno, Japan Atomic Power Co. President Hiroshi Morimoto, and Ichiro Takekuro, who will be a president of the joint venture, according to the statement.

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