BHEL-GE consortium bags 22 Bn ONGC contract

Tuesday, 24 June 2008, 19:30 IST
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Agartala: The state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) has awarded a 22.07 billion power generation contract to a consortium comprising the state-run Bharat Heavy Electric Limited (BHEL) and US-based General Electric Company, officials said here Tuesday. "After outbidding France-based Alstom, the BHEL-GE consortium won the bidding process last week for generation of 740 MW of power from natural gas produced by ONGC," said ONGC spokesman Sanjeev Sharma. The power plant is being developed by ONGC Tripura Power Company (OTPC), a new company formed for commissioning the giant project. According to an official statement, the ONGC has 50 percent equity stake in OTPC, the balance being held by Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Service (IL&FS) and the Tripura government. "The first unit of 360 MW would be installed in 42 months, followed by the second unit within three more months," Sharma added. The ONGC's biggest ever power project is to be commissioned in south Tripura's Palatana, about 60 km south of here, and is expected to be operational by 2012. The statement said the state-run Power Grid Corporation Limited (PGCIL), OTPC and the northeastern states would set up a transmission line at a cost of 18 billion to hook Palatana with the national grid at Bongaigaon in western Assam. "Power from the Palatana project was initially meant to be allocated to Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Delhi (100 MW each) in the northern region and to Assam and Tripura (100 MW each) in the northeastern region," said Tripura Power Minister Manik Dey. He said the union power ministry had subsequently decided to allocate all electricity generated from the project to the power starved northeastern states. Keeping in mind that the northeastern states are due to receive the entire quantum of power generated at the project, the power ministry has recommended that the associated 650 km, 400 KV double circuit transmission line from Palatana to Bongaigaon should be implemented through a joint venture company (JVC) formed between the PGCL, OTPC, IL&FS and the northeastern states. The much expected commissioning of the power project, a co-generation waste heat recovery power plant and ONGC's first major commercial project, is likely to be delayed due to difficulties in transporting heavy turbines and machineries to south Tripura. "ONGC intended to ship the power generation equipment from the Haldia Port in West Bengal to Tripura via Bangladesh in order to save considerable transportation time," a senior official said. He said dispatching the heavy equipments by surface within India (through the mountainous northeastern states) was extremely difficult but Dhaka is yet to respond to New Delhi's request in using Bangladesh's waterways as a transit route for transporting the equipments.
Source: IANS