Skip to main content

Hope Wind Farm could save $1B annually – Investor

By Rabindra Rooplall
International Pharmaceutical Agency (IPA), one of the investors in the Hope Wind Farm Project, says the 25 megawatt facility can reduced the country’s fuel bill by US$5 million (G$1B) annually


The project, was stalled under the previous administration, is now back on the agenda. IPA is a part of Guyana Wind-Farm Incorporated, which has once again put forward an offer which could see GoldWind of China, rated at least third in the world in the establishment of wind

Lloyd Singh

Lloyd Singh

farms, setting up 10 wind turbines capable of generating 2.5 Megawatts of electricity each. The projected cost of the facility is US$42 million.
Lloyd Singh, the proprietor of IPA had long seen the benefits of the project, but said the initiative was frustrated by the PPP, which was in power for 23 years, but lost power to the multi-party APNU/AFC coalition last May.


“Why would a Former President (Bharrat Jagdeo) who was given the title Champion of the Earth for whatever he was doing on renewable energy not look at a broad base.
“This project could have been easily been picked up when an investor like myself and others came to your door begging for it and you didn’t want to deliver,” he said, in reference to the attitude of former President Jagdeo.
He said that the concept of the project is different from the Amaila Falls project which was proposed by the former administration but has since been put on hold.


“Unlike the Amaila Falls Project where the government is being asked to pay Amaila for the capacity that it builds, our deal was always to pay for the electricity the wind farm generates,” Singh stated.
Singh was at a loss as to why the PPP did not push ahead with the project.


“The Government of Guyana has zero investment, not a cent they have to put in it; (what was needed ) was just the green light and relevant documentation, a letter from GPL stating that all the electricity that the project can generate they will buy at 12 cents per kilowatt,” he said.
It presently costs GPL over 20 U. S. cents per kilowatt hour to generate electricity using heavy fuel oil.


He said that even if the government had to contribute financing for the project, it could have done so with funding from the forest-saving deal with Norway, which provides US$250 million for low carbon initiatives.
Last year, the then Cabinet granted approval for Guyana Water Inc. (GWI), GPL and the then Government to execute a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for the development of the Hope Beach Wind Farm Project. However, the investor said the terms contained in the MOU was not feasible for the development of a thriving wind farm since under the Build Own Operate Transfer (BOOT) arrangement the previous government made an unreasonable proposition where the startup was expected no later than a year with a BOOT period of five years.
Now, with a fresh government in place, Singh is hoping the project could finally be realized.


“I am hoping the present administration will move as quickly as possible to get this project going.”
He said the project documents on the Hope Beach project is almost 12 years old so the investors are saying that they need new data.
“We have already invested in a tower there and in another month it will be one year old; that is how long a verification tower is there for the investors. The new finding recently revealed that the new turbine towers don’t have to be 90 meters since the wind is enough at 80 meters for generation.”


He explained that the wind vein has shown that Hope Beach has a consistent flow of wind like no other part along the East Coast of Demerara.


According to Singh, by the end of the third phase, the project could provide up to 65 megawatts of electricity.
Adding that if phase two and three are implemented, he said 65 megawatts can be added to the power grid. Renewable energy, particularly wind is available 24 hours x 7 days a week, throughout a year.


The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) had determined that the project would not have a negative impact on its surroundings.
“The applications have been screened to assess the potential environmental impacts and it has been determined that an Environmental and Social Management Plan (ESMP) be conducted for the above-mentioned projects by an independent body for submission and approval by the agency,” a notice published last year in the newspapers stated.
The ESMP detailed specific measures and processes to be undertaken by the company to ensure that the proposed project is implemented in an environmentally sound and sustainable manner.
Electricity can be produced by using wind turbines and wind farms. Wind turbines in recent years have become a popular form of renewable and clean energy.

 

An artist’s impression of the 25Mw Wind Farm at Hope Beach, East Coast Demerara.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Sound like a good idea.  I am sure this statement is incorrect:

Renewable energy, particularly wind is available 24 hours x 7 days a week, throughout a year.

 

The capacity factor for wind turbines is usually about 0.25 to 0.35 so that means they generate electricity only 25 to 35 percent of the time.  Full output also depend on wind speed, which for a 2.5 MW turbine could be about 30 mph.

 

So obviously a 5 year BOOT period is grossly inadequate for recovery of and on the capital expenditures because sufficient kWh will not be generated in 5 years.  I hope the investor has a good feasibility plan to know exactly what is needed.

FM

I would like to hear Jagdeo's reason for turning down this project, might be more to it than this fellow is claiming.  Nevertheless if it can be done without govt spending any money and minimal environmental issue, then Granger and company should not block it. Time will tell if the afc/apnu will demand kickback in order to allow this project to go through. 

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

I would like to hear Jagdeo's reason for turning down this project, might be more to it than this fellow is claiming.  Nevertheless if it can be done without govt spending any money and minimal environmental issue, then Granger and company should not block it. Time will tell if the afc/apnu will demand kickback in order to allow this project to go through. 

The are going to move the project from Hope to Pradoville 2.  Jagdeo said he likes the sight of windmills blocking his view of the Atlantic.  And the swooshing sound will help him sleep at nights 

FM
“The Government of Guyana has zero investment, not a cent they have to put in it; (what was needed ) was just the green light and relevant documentation, a letter from GPL stating that all the electricity that the project can generate they will buy at 12 cents per kilowatt,” he said.


It presently costs GPL over 20 U. S. cents per kilowatt hour to generate electricity using heavy fuel oil.

 

Hope Wind Farm could save $1B annually – Investor, October 18, 2015  http://guyanachronicle.com/hop...b-annually-investor/, By Rabindra Rooplall

Many studies for wind power were already done in various parts of Guyana.

 

Perhaps, it is time for these projects to proceed to operation.

 

 

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

I would like to hear Jagdeo's reason for turning down this project, might be more to it than this fellow is claiming.  Nevertheless if it can be done without govt spending any money and minimal environmental issue, then Granger and company should not block it. Time will tell if the afc/apnu will demand kickback in order to allow this project to go through. 

You argued with me right here that Jagdeo studied the matter and his scientific advisers insist wind farms are not possible, You even posted a paper. Remember?

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

I would like to hear Jagdeo's reason for turning down this project, might be more to it than this fellow is claiming.  Nevertheless if it can be done without govt spending any money and minimal environmental issue, then Granger and company should not block it. Time will tell if the afc/apnu will demand kickback in order to allow this project to go through. 

You argued with me right here that Jagdeo studied the matter and his scientific advisers insist wind farms are not possible, You even posted a paper. Remember?

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

I would like to hear Jagdeo's reason for turning down this project, might be more to it than this fellow is claiming.  Nevertheless if it can be done without govt spending any money and minimal environmental issue, then Granger and company should not block it. Time will tell if the afc/apnu will demand kickback in order to allow this project to go through. 

You argued with me right here that Jagdeo studied the matter and his scientific advisers insist wind farms are not possible, You even posted a paper. Remember?

Damn, i would like to see that paper.

FM
Originally Posted by VVP:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

I would like to hear Jagdeo's reason for turning down this project, might be more to it than this fellow is claiming.  Nevertheless if it can be done without govt spending any money and minimal environmental issue, then Granger and company should not block it. Time will tell if the afc/apnu will demand kickback in order to allow this project to go through. 

You argued with me right here that Jagdeo studied the matter and his scientific advisers insist wind farms are not possible, You even posted a paper. Remember?

Damn, i would like to see that paper.

Jagdeo paid some  group a hearty sum to say wind farms are not feasible. He posted the information. I will check to see if I have the doc. I told him it was bogus as a three dollar bill because I had   had the privileged of watching one go on line in what appeared to be absolute calm. These are big things and are high up catching a different layer of the atmosphere

FM
Last edited by Former Member

US$26M Hope Beach wind farm no longer feasible

 By KNews  

Hydropower plant will be aggressively pursued - Jagdeo

By Gary Eleazar

Guyana simply does not have favourable wind flow to justify the setting up of the intendedwind farm at Hope Beach, East Coast Demerara.
This is according to Head of State Bharrat Jagdeo during an interactive session with media operatives, yesterday.

WIND FARM


He emphasized that Guyana would have had to install 11 megawatts of power which when transferred to the national grid would have been reduced to three megawatts. This was a costly exercise given that with renewable energy the initial cost is high.
“We don’t have the wind flows that will do wind power justice like some other countries have.”
The president said that is why the country opted for a fossil fuel option, which it subsidises. He added that an expected 21 megawatts that is expected to come on stream in September at the Kingston Power Plant
According to the Guyana Energy Agency’s website, “The Government of Guyana and DELTA Caribbean N.V, signed an MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) in March 2007 for the construction of a 13.5 MW Wind Farm at Hope Beach, ECD.”
The project was supposed to supply power to the grid and was expected to be commissioned in 2010.
The executing company on its website had listed the activity to cost some US$26M.
As it relates to the Amaila Falls Hydro Electric Project, the Head of State reminded that the country went out to tender, the bids came in but at the time the investors cited the financial crisis.
Jagdeo was adamant however that “by September we have to get definitive word from the investor…they are doing some additional studies.”
He noted that if at that time the investors cannot move forward with the project, “then the State, because it has spent a bit of money, will inherit all of the documents, the drawings, the designs, the environmental permit and everything else which has taken years to put together.”
He said that should that time come “we will have to see some other source of building, this including using some of the funds that we can get from the Low Carbon Development Strategy…Renewable energy is very important in the long run.”
“We have to build that hydro one way or another; we have to do it.”
The project is based on an initial study that was carried out between the years 1974 and 1976 to explore the hydroelectric potential under a grant from the United Nations.
That study was done by Montreal Engineering over the two-year period.
A number of sites were identified, but through a shortlist process, these were eventually trimmed to three “most promising” sites.
Further studies by the developer between 1997 and 2001 related to the demand for power, the economics, environmental, ecological and political impacts of developing each of these sites led to Amaila as the location of choice.
In 1998, Synergy Holdings Inc. joined with Harza Engineering Company (now called MW Harza Global) to fund and perform a detailed feasibility study and Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for the first Phase of the project.
Between 1999 and 2001, a full feasibility study and EIA was carried out on site including surveying, drilling in excess of 400 meters, and several site visits by Harza engineers to evaluate the drill cores and the physical characteristics of the site and to install river gauging equipment downstream of the falls.
A man-camp on site and an access road crew in excess of 50 personnel worked on this project for several months. Drilling equipment was flown in by helicopter - supplies came in by river and the ATV access road.
Following the on-site investigations and mapping, several alternate designs were looked at and the developers chose a final design that offered the lowest construction cost while maintaining the expandability of the project.

Moco Moco Hydropower Station


The Amaila site is located on the Kuribrong River; a tributary of the Potaro, and the nearest point of access is the airstrip at Kaieteur Falls on the Potaro River, approximately 15 miles to the south.
An overland trail exists from Kaieteur to Amaila while access is also provided over land by an all-weather road through Tumatumari on the Potaro River and on to Mahdia and Kangaruma
River access along the Potaro-Kuribrong Rivers to the foot of Amaila Falls involves several portages around rapids and waterfalls.
The road from Tumatumari was recently extended to Mahdia/Kangaruma that brings you closer to the site but approximately 30 miles of additional roads will need to be built to the top of Amaila Falls.
In mid-2005, serious talks were restarted between Synergy, the Guyana Power and Light Inc. and the government in an attempt to finally put the project on a fast track development schedule.
Following a series of meetings with Government, an MOU was signed between the developers and Government on May 23, 2006, outlining their agreement to proceed with the development of the Hydropower plant.
The construction process should have commenced in September last when the tender process should have closed but was subsequently extended by President Bharrat Jagdeo, who has publicly committed to building the hydropower station – estimated to cost approximately US$450M - before he demits office.
The fate of the project, at least in the near future, now depends on the extended tender process or should that fail because foreign investment is dwindling, the government commits to building it with taxpayers’ dollars.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

 

FM

This sentence makes NO engineering sense:

 

He emphasized that Guyana would have had to install 11 megawatts of power which when transferred to the national grid would have been reduced to three megawatts. This was a costly exercise given that with renewable energy the initial cost is high.

 

Wind speed is indeed questionable in Guyana.  That's why I hope investors will do sound studies before they embark on these projects.

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×