Technical Report: Available Cogeneration Technologies in Europe (Part I & II)

Technical-Financial Analysis (TFA) Model V2

Cogeneration Project Development Guide 2nd Edition

COGEN 3 information sheets

Presentations in ASEAN

Presentations in Europe

COGEN 3 Competence Centre (1MB - pdf)

More downloads

 

What did COGEN 3 do ?

COGEN 3 promoted the implementation of Proven, Clean & Efficient Biomass, Coal, Gas Cogeneration Projects by facilitating business partnerships between ASEAN industries and EUROPEAN suppliers. COGEN 3 was in operation in January 2002 to December 2004. This website will be available until 2015.

 

 

PLN signs contract with Alstom consortium
Business and Investment, 09 August, 2004

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

State electricity firm PT PLN has signed a contract with a consortium comprising Japanese, Indonesian and American firms for the provision of boilers for the Tarahan power project in South Sumatra .

Under the contract signed on June 26, the consortium, comprising Alstom Power Inc. USA, Marubeni Corp., Japan and PT Alstom Power Energy System Indonesia , will provide PLN with two circulating fluidized bed (CFB) boilers for both the Tarahan 3 and Tarahan 4 power plants.

Both boilers are valued at US$118.264 million, according to Eko Sulianto, a director of PT Alstom Power Energy System Indonesia .

Both PT Alstom Power Energy System and Alstom Power Inc., USA , are subsidiaries of French engineering giant Alstom. The former had a plant in Surabaya , which produces, among other things, boilers.

A CFB boiler is an environmentally friendly type of furnace that can use low-grade coal. This type of coal, which accounts for 60 percent of Indonesia 's coal reserves, cannot be used in power plants equipped with standard boilers.

Eko told The Jakarta Post over the weekend that the signing of the contract had eased worries regarding the future of the project.

The construction of the Tarahan 3 and 4 power pants was initially scheduled to start before the end of last year and to be completed by the end of 2006. Each of the power plants has a capacity of 100 megawatts and both are valued at US$350 million.

However, PLN was forced to delay the construction work because the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC), as the financier of the project, was unable to finish the evaluation of the tender results for the projects by the end of last year.

The project is seen as crucial in view of the current power crisis in the region. Installed power generation capacity in southern Sumatra currently stands at 580 MW with the demand at about the same amount. A power grid should have power reserves amounting to 30 percent of capacity.

Eko said as a result of the delay in the construction of the project, the power plants would come into operation later than the initial schedule, that is, in 2007 for Tarahan 4 and 2008 for Tarahan 3.

Back to Newsclippings | To top