Agartala, January 16 (IANS): The industry-starved northeastern region of India would be a power surplus area by June, when ONGC’s 726 MW power project starts full capacity generation, a top official said here Thursday.
The 726 MW capacity combined cycle gas-based thermal power project (using both water and natural gas) at Palatana, 60 km from Agartala, in southern Tripura is the state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation’s (ONGC) first commercial power project in India.
“The generation from the first unit (363.3 MW capacity) of the power plant began Dec 31, 2013, and the generation from the second unit (363.3 MW capacity) would start in June,” ONGC Tripura Power Company (OTPC) managing director Sudhindra Kumar Dube said. “However, there are some problems of transmission of electricity in the region. We expect these problems would be overcome,” he told reporters.
According to the official, the current peak-hour demand of electricity in the seven northeastern states is 2,200 to 2,300 MW. Now, the shortage of power is around 100 MW. “After the generation of the second unit of the Palatana power plant, the northeastern states would be able to supply its surplus power to other parts of the country through the national grid,” Dube, a renowned power engineer, said.
The Palatana power project was inaugurated by President Pranab Mukherjee June 21. After that, the power plant faced some technical hurdles, but started full generation of electricity from the first unit Dec 31. OTPC is a special purpose vehicle (SPV) promoted by ONGC, Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services (IL & FS) and Tripura government, created in 2004 for execution of the 726.6 MW combined cycle gas-based thermal power project.
Dube said that from this power plant, Assam will get the maximum share of 240 MW of electricity, followed by Tripura (196 MW), Meghalaya (79 MW), Manipur (42 MW), Nagaland (27 MW), Mizoram (22 MW) and Arunachal Pradesh (22 MW), while IL & FS and OTPC keep 98 MW.