Site icon GRASSROOTS ONLINE

Nigerian GenCo Egbin Eyes 3,000MW Capacity Expansion Worth $1.8bn

Nigeria’s biggest thermal power station, Egbin Power Plc, is looking to raise $1.8bn for power expansion generation project of up to 3,000 Megawatts, MW.

The plants’ owners are looking at raising $1.8 billion to more than double generation capacity as it seeks to boost output and export electricity to West African countries.

It is looking at a combination of debt and equity to meet the funding requirements ahead of the start of construction work in the second quarter of next year, according to the company.

“The plan is to raise the fund to be available to kick off,” it said in an email, without giving more details as the funding arrangements are being firmed up, according to Bloomberg.

Egbin Power Plc, owned by Sahara Group, plans to build the second phase of its 1,320-megawatt power plant by installing “high efficiency gas combined cycle power plants,” that will produce an additional 1,754 megawatts electricity.

The first phase of the expansion project will begin with the construction of open-cycle turbines next year and will be completed with a closed cycle by 2025, it said.

The company acquired the power plant in 2013 when the government disposed of state-owned electricity generation and distribution assets to the private sector to make them efficient and help curb blackouts.

It hit the generation peak of 970 megawatts on the asset this year helped by an increase in gas supply.

Nigeria, has 13,000 megawatts of installed electricity-production capacity, with only about 4,500 megawatts dispatched to the grid daily, in part because of dilapidated transmission infrastructure.

The government’s privatization agency is now proposing to sell the transmission network in a bid to attract the investment needed to improve its capacity.

Exit mobile version