List of power stations in Nepal

Kali Gandaki
Kukule Ganga
Location of power stations in Nepal
Hydro
The following is a list of the power stations in Nepal.
Hydroelectric
| po | Capacity (MW) | Commissioned | Location | Owner | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kali Gandaki | 144 | 2002 | Syangja | NEA | [1][2] |
| Middle Marsyangdi | 70 | 2008 | Lamjung kulekhani | ||
| Marsyangdi | 69 | 1989 | Tanahun | NEA | [3] |
| Kulekhani I | 60 | 1982 | Makwanpur | NEA | [4] |
| Upper Bhote Koshi | 45 | 2001 | Sindhupalchowk | Bhote Koshi Power Company Private Limited (BKPC) | [5] |
| Kulekhani II | 32 | 1986 | Makwanpur | NEA | [6] |
| Trishuli | 24 | 1967 ( Initially installed capacity was 21 MW, rehabilitated in 1995) | Nuwakot | NEA | [7] |
| Gandak | 15 | 1979 | Nawalparasi | NEA | [8] |
| Modi Khola | 14.8 | 2000 | Parbat | NEA | [9] |
| Devighat | 14.1 | 1984 | Nuwakot | NEA | [10] |
| Sunkoshi | 10.05 | 1972 | Sindhupalchowk | NEA | [11] |
|Mahendra power house |1.728 |.... |Kathmandu |- |Biratnagar
Diesel Power Stations
| Name | Capacity (MW) | Commissioned | Location | Owner | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duhabi Multifuel | 39 | 1997 | Sunsari | ||
| Hetauda | 14.41 | 2012 | Makwanpur | [12] | |
Hydropower stations under construction
| Hydropower Station | Capacity (MW) |
|---|---|
| Upper Tamakoshi Project | 456 |
| Trishuli 3A | 60 |
| Chamelia | 30 |
| Kulekhani III | 14 |
| Gamgadhi | 0.4 |
Other Power Stations
- Solar power stations
- Simikot 50 kW
- Gamgadhi 50 kW
- Dhobighat Oxidaizing Pond 680.4 kW, Owner:KUKL, Dedicated 11kV feeder connecting to Teku Substation
- 10 other small hydropower stations (total: 18.9 MW)
- 29 small isolated hydropower stations (total: 5.676 MW)
Name List of Upcoming Hydropower Projects in Nepal
| Hydropower Station | Capacity (MW) |
|---|---|
| Seti | 750 |
| Arun III | 402 |
| Budi Gandaki | 600 |
| Kali Gandaki II | 660 |
| Lower Arun | 308 |
| Upper Arun | 335 |
| Karnali Chisapani | 10,800 |
| Upper Karnali | 300 |
| Chameliya | 30 |
| Pancheswor | 7480 |
| Thulo Dhunga | 25 |
| Tavur/Mewa | 101 |
| Dudhkoshi | 300 |
| Budhiganga | 20 |
| Rahughat Khola | 27 |
| Likhu IV | 40 |
| Kabeli ‘A’ | 30 |
| Upper Marsyandi ‘A’ | 121 |
| Kulekhani III | 14 |
| Aandhikola | 180 |
| Khimti II | 27 |
| Upper Modi | 14 |
| Langtang Khola | 218 |
| Madisaneswor | 86 |
| Upper Seti | 122 |
| Kankai | 60 |
| Upper Tamakoshi | 309 |
| Upper Modi ‘A’ | 42 |
| Hewa Khola | 10 |
| Upper Trishuli ‘B’ | 37 |
| Karnali Phase I | 1,080 |
| Total | 22,536 |
Source: Bidhyut Magazine/Semi- Annual Report - NEA, Bhadra 2063
See also
References
- ↑ "Energy Sector Overview". United States Agency for International Development (USAID).
- ↑ "Kali Gandaki Hydroelectric Power Plant". Global Energy Observatory. Retrieved 26 April 2014.
- ↑ "NEA Annual Report" (PDF). Nepal Electricity Authority.
- ↑ "Kulekhani Hydroelectric Power Station". sustainablehydropower.
- ↑ "official". Bhotekoshi official website.
- ↑ "Kulekhani Hydroelectric Power Station". sustainablehydropower.
- ↑ "NEA Annual Report" (PDF). Nepal Electricity Authority.
- ↑ "NEA Annual Report" (PDF). Nepal Electricity Authority.
- ↑ "NEA Annual Report" (PDF). Nepal Electricity Authority.
- ↑ "NEA Annual Report" (PDF). Nepal Electricity Authority.
- ↑ "NEA Annual Report" (PDF). Nepal Electricity Authority.
- ↑ "Diesel plant in Hetauda generates electricity". The Himalayan Times.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.