Java to host waste-fired power plant
Waste power awaits Java and Bali.
This will be made possible by PT Pertamina, which plans to erect a 120 megawatt waste-fired power plant at the Bantargebang garbage dump in Bekasi, West Java.
This will provide electricity to Java and Bali.
The company had signed a preliminary agreement with the contractor firm PT Godang Tua Jaya, the operator of the Bantargebang integrated waste treatment plant, to initiate the project.
The power plant project has an estimated investment of around US$180 million, According to Pertamina gas director Hari Karyuliarto, the plant will utilize as much as 2,000 tons of garbage
per day to generate electric power through biomass and municipal solid waste technology.
The 110 hectare Bantargebang TPST site has the capacity to accommodate around 5,000 tons of garbage distributed daily from Jakarta.
“We are expecting the new power plant to be operational and produce electricity by 2014,” Hari stated.
Pertamina, according to Hari, has yet to confirm the new power plant’s site. He did confirm, however, that the electricity from the trash-fired power plant would be distributed through the Java-Bali interconnection.
Assuming one household needs approximately 1,000 kilowatt-hours (kWh), the planned 120 MW plant could supply power for 120,000 households.
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