Vietnam
Ho Chi Minh City cuts down electricity use by 2.7%
Ho Chi Minh city has saved more than 232.8 million kWh of electricity, equivalent to VND 325.7 billion, in the first seven months of the year.
Ho Chi Minh City cuts down electricity use by 2.7%
Ho Chi Minh city has saved more than 232.8 million kWh of electricity, equivalent to VND 325.7 billion, in the first seven months of the year.
Bangladesh braces for power price hike in winter
Dhaka Electricity Supply Co Ltd (DESCO) and West Zone Power Distribution Co Ltd have sought the Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission (BERC) approval to their proposals for a hike in retail power tariffs. In the proposals, up to a 21.94 per cent tariff hike in the city areas and around an 18.99 per cent increase in tariffs for 21 districts in the south-western region have been mooted. If the DESCO and West Zone Power proposals were cleared, the average retail power tariff per unit (Kilo Watt Hour) would stand at Tk. 5.28 as against the present Tk. 4.33 in the city and the tariff for south-western districts would increase from the present Tk. 4.53 to Tk. 4.77. The proposals were discussed thoroughly at an open meeting of the commission chairman, members and stakeholders, held at the BERC office here on Sunday. The DESCO had submitted its proposal to BERC on June 19, 2011 for a 13.16 per cent retail tariff hike while the West Zone Power proposal, submitted on June 20, sought a 13.11 percent hike. Later, in August this year, the DESCO revised its proposal and sought a 21.95 per cent hike in tariff. On August 2, West Zone Power sought an upward revision of its tariff hike proposal at 18.99 per cent. Incidentally, on February 8, 2011, the BERC had for the last time raised tariffs for bulk and retail electricity by 11 and 5 per cent, respectively, with retrospective from February 1. BERC chairman Syed Yusuf Hossain said end-users, ranging from domestic consumers to industrial entrepreneurs, would be saddled with an extra burden if the two proposal wee cleared. The open discussion on the proposals was organised by the commission at its Karwan Bazaar office in the city. Hossain said common people could not cope with the additional inflationary pressure as the prices of essential commodities had already gone beyond their reach due to an increase in energy and fuel prices in recent months. He urged DESCO and West Zone Power to be guided by their own judgments before proceeding to seek an increase in retail power tariffs, especially at a time when the country’s economy is facing a sharp fall in the balance of payments and a liquidity crunch. “Wide inflation has already kept the government under pressure. A fresh hike in power tariffs would only worsen the situation. As it is, we are being condemned by people for allowing your tariff hike proposals to be discussed. Is it not embarrassing for us?,” Hossain said while he was delivering a speech at the discussion. When DESCO and West Zone Power officials present at the meeting cited the rising cost of distribution as a reason for seeking a fresh tariff hike, Hossain advised them to revise their proposal downwards and take other effective measures. The other measures included reducing system loss, preventing illegal tapping of power, improving distribution services and going for viable expansion in case of new connections. Time has come to categorise the domestic consumers, Hossain said adding, since moneyed people enjoy luxurious living in air-conditioned residents at the same tariff rate the low-income group people pay for their power consumption. Meanwhile, the commission has announced that it would hear the DESCO proposal on October 20 and take up the West Zone Power proposal on October 24. During the February 2011 tariff hike announcement, the commission had said that the hike would not be applicable to domestic consumption of electricity between 1-100 units monthly, irrigation and non-residential (religious, social and educational institutions) connections. The commission chairman had then said the tariff increase for bulk power (11 per cent) would be implemented in two phases on July 31 and from August. He had also said the commission would set a ceiling on the tariff hike, at five per cent over the previous per unit rate of Tk. 4 (prevailing before February 2011), for retail consumers. Incidentally, last month, BERC rejected a tariff-hike proposal of the Rural Electrification Board. Similar proposals moved by Dhaka Power Distribution Co Ltd and Power Development Board are under the consideration of the commission.
Vietnam power price to be adjusted by input parameters
The mechanism to adjust Vietnam's electricity price will based on the monthly calculation and examination of the volatility of fundamental input parameters in comparison with parameters in use to determine the current electricity price.
Chinese firm heeds protests to stop Cambodian hydro projects
Two Chinese state-owned companies held back from their investment projects in Cambodia under public pressure.
Vietnam's massive hydropower development stirs environmental fears
Vietnam’s uncontrollable construction of hydroelectric projects had reached a crisis point that has sparked environmental fears.
AES taps 14 financers for $1.5B Vietnam coal-fired plant
AES has closed a $1.5 billion long-term non-recourse construction financing from 12 commercial banks and two Korean government export credit agencies for its 1,200MW Mong Duong II coal-fired power plant.
Japan, Vietnam restart nuclear tech talks in September
The governments of Vietnam and Japan will restart discussions in September on the provision of Japanese nuclear power technology to the Southeast Asian nation.
Vietnam power sector to need annual investments of over US$6 B
Under the plan recently approved by the Prime Minister, electricity price shall be gradually adjusted according to market mechanism and is expected to be 8-9 cents per kWh in 2020. It is currently at about 6 cents per KHh.
Price of electricity in Vietnam to be adjusted monthly
Vietnam Electricity plans to adjust its monthly pricing based on fluctuating costs such as US dollar exchange rate, changing fuel prices, and also the power output level from its plant.
Malaysia's Jaks to build Vietnam coal-fired plant
Jaks Resources Bhd is expected to start construction of its 1,200 MW coal-fired power project worth US$2 billion in Hai Duong province, Vietnam, in the second quarter of 2013.
Indochina to amp up investments in thermal and hydro power projects
Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos are planning for significant investment increases in their electricity generation capacity in order to keep pace with the rising demand.
GE’s new capacitor banks to improve power efficiency in Vietnam
The Fixed Series Compensation system delivers higher efficiency by increasing the capacity of the existing power line infrastructure.
Vietnam eyes 2013 completion of Pleiku-Cau Bong transmission line
The government of Vietnam asked the local authorities to create favourable conditions for the Pleiku to Cau Bong transmission line project’s investors.
Son La hydropower's 3rd turbine operational on Aug 25
The third turbine of Son La hydropower plant with designed capacity of 400 MW had been put into idle operation successfully.
Vietnam saves 667.38 million kWh in first half
The energy saving results of Vietnam's power corporations in the first six months of 2011 reached 667.38 million kWh, 1.3% of commercial electricity.
Petrovietnam secures $95M loan to build coal-fired plant
Petrovietnam has secured a $95 million loan to build a $1.6 billion coal-fired power plant in central Vietnam.
Vietnam's KST Energy taps Russia's Energoproekt for thermal power project
KST Energy and Russia’s Energoproekt Company signed a contract to perform a feasibility study for building a thermal power plant near the proposed refinery project at the Nhon Hoi Economic Zone, Binh Dinh Province.