FOLLOWING recent indications by the Tanzanian
government of its commitment to begin construction of the country's main power
grid in 2014, coal explorer Edenville Energy has confirmed its intention to
construct a 100 MW power station at its Tanzania-based Rukwa coal project,
supplying energy directly into the country’s proposed new power grid.
The Africa-focused miner said in a statement on
Tuesday that the government had indicated that construction of the Western
Power Line, between Mbeya and Sumbawanga, would start in 2014 and was expected
to be completed during 2016 – far earlier than previously indicated.
The primary transmission line would pass Sumbawanga,
in close proximity to Rukwa, ultimately linking the existing and future power
generation sources in the south and south-west of Tanzania to the load centres
in the Mwanza and Arusha regions in the north.
The government's intention was to increase installed
generation capacity from its current 1 438 MW to 2 780 MW by 2015, providing
access to electricity to an additional four-million people.
Edenville’s announcement followed a September
scoping study at Rukwa, which indicated that it was “commercially attractive”
for the company to build a small power generation facility that would operate
independently of the main grid and require only a small share of the company's
total coal resource.
“However, the accelerated progress of the Western
power line gives Edenville the opportunity to move towards development of a
larger power station, using Edenville's entire coal resource, which would feed
directly into the new grid infrastructure,” commented chairperson Sally
Schofield.
She added that there was also potential to export
power directly into Zambia, or other neighbouring States, using the existing 66
kV interconnector at Sumbawanga.
Edenville’s management team was currently in
early-stage discussions with potential Asian partners with the relevant
experience and expertise to develop the project.
These potential partners were “highly experienced”
in the feasibility, construction and funding of projects of a similar scale,
and with a similar quality of coal to that of Rukwa.
Discussions were also under way with qualified
engineering and power consultants to guide the development process, including
early-stage technical work, large-scale bulk sampling and metallurgical
testwork, for a wash plant and power plant design.
“The accelerated progress of the Western power line
is a tremendous advancement not only for Tanzania but for Edenville. With a
100-MW-plus power plant, we believe we will have a sustainable, long-term
project that can contribute significantly to Tanzania's future power
requirements,” Schofield noted.

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