Turkish vitality firm, ENKA, in consortium with Siemens will quickly start the construction of 1,321 MW Simple Cycle Power Plants in Libya.
The contracts for the two power plants, 650 MW in Misrata and Tripoli West 671 MW, had been signed with the General Electricity Company of Libya (GECOL) to meet the rising electricity demand in Libya.
According to ENKA, the Misrata project relies on an influence island configuration for two SGT5-PAC 4000F Siemens combustion turbine generator models, whereas the Tripoli West project is based on an influence island configuration for 4 SGT5-PAC 2000E Siemens combustion turbine generator units.
The generators of the vegetation shall be dual-fuel fired with light fuel oil and pure gasoline. Power shall be generated and stepped up through the principle transformers to the grid.
The two projects are planned to be completed in 2022.
ENKA has been current in Libya for nearly 50 years developing mega-scale projects from industrial and energy crops to constructing projects and critical infrastructure.
The Turkish company has other energy initiatives in Libya, including a 640-MW capacity gas turbine energy plant in Ubari in central Libya which was examined for connection to the Libyan energy grid in October 2017, however has since failed to start operating because of political instability and civil wars in the region.
ENKA, also เกจวัดแรงดันน้ำ10บาร์ and engineering firm, has accomplished three energy vegetation in Libya, 24 city improvement and housing, 6 infrastructure and 24 industrial projects together with cement and desalination crops throughout the nation.
The firm attributes its challenge supply successes to a proven capability and important experience working in challenging environments with lack of infrastructure and beneath extraordinarily harsh weather conditions.
Another Turkish firm, Karadeniz Holding, has proposed to produce electrical energy to the western part of Libya. A technical team from the company visited Libya last 12 months to present the proposal.
Karadeniz Holding runs a fleet of floating energy turbines known as energy ships which plug into electrical energy grids after berthing. The company target the Libyan-produced diesel and pure fuel to deliver as much as 1,000 MWh.
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