Submarine cable to bring power to light up Phu Quoc
Island
EVN
employees are seen at the Ha Tien 110 kV substation in Kien Giang November 2,
2013. Tuoi Tre
Locals in the Mekong Delta
The 55.8-km submarine 110KV cable system will link mainland Ha
Tien Town with
It will provide a sustainable power supply for the island
where most locals still rely on diesel generators to light up their homes and
power their TV sets.
Once completed, this will be the longest submarine cable
system in
The project will begin on November 21, and is expected to be
completed on January 13, 2014, local authorities have announced.
Italy-based Prysmian Powerlink is the main contractor of the
US$93.4 million project.
Other construction units involved in the project are the 18.2-km
110KV cable line from Kien Luong to Ha Tien which cost VND76.7 billion, and
two substations in Ha Tien and Phu Quoc, which consumed some VND156.2 billion
worth of investment.
These facilities have reached completion and are waiting to be
connected with the submarine cable system.
The underwater cable project is carried out under an
engineering, procurement and construction contract signed between Electricity
of Viet Nam Corporation's Southern Power Corp (EVN SPC) and Prysmian
Powerlink in May 2012.
It is funded by a loan from the World Bank and supplemented
with EVN SPC's own budget.
Highest power price
With an inadequate electricity system, locals on
In Ganh Dau Commune, for instance, the price is VND25,000 per
kWh, 16 times higher than what people ashore pay.
Some residents have their own generators, but only use them
for a few hours per day since fuel prices are also exorbitant.
Huynh Thi Cam Hong, a Ganh Dau resident, said she pays VND1
million a month only to light up two compact fluorescent light bulbs and turn
the television on for a couple hours a day.
“Those with washing machines or refrigerators have to pay up
to VND4 million a month,” she said.
Tran Ngoc Nga, deputy director of the 100-room Thien Hai Son
hotel in the island’s Duong Dong town, said monthly power costs VND450
million, three times higher than the bill for a similar hotel ashore.
High power prices mean higher service charges, which reduce
the competitiveness of Phu Quoc hotels compared with rivals in Nha Trang or
Manufacturers are affected by the power shortage, too.
Ho Kim Lien, owner of the fish sauce making facility Khai
Hoan, said she must endure power outages six times a month.
She uses a diesel generator during outages, which costs an
additional VND20 million, she bemoaned.
TUOITRENEWS
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Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 11, 2013
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