Vietnam to solicit bids for wind power
projects
Maria
Hoeft, from the German Wind Energy Association, delivers a presentation on
German-made wind power equipment and technology at a seminar on the potential
of wind power in Vietnam in Ho Chi Minh City on November 23, 2015.
Thoai Tran/Tuoi Tre News
The Ministry of Industry and Trade will submit to the government
a pilot program to organize international bidding to pick competent
developers for wind power projects that have been long delayed, a state official said at a seminar
on wind energy in Ho Chi Minh City on Monday.
In the near future, the ministry will study a number of
delayed wind power projects in the south-central provinces of Ninh Thuan and
Binh Thuan in order to choose capable investors offering the best price for
their electricity, said Pham Trong Thuc, director of the New and Renewable
Energy Department under the ministry.
The program, if approved by the government, will help
accelerate the progress of many wind power projects in Vietnam, Thuc said at
the event held to introduce the potential of wind power in Vietnam using
German solutions.
The government has also assigned the ministry and relevant
state agencies the tasks of reviewing the existing wind power projects and
checking the real funds that investors channel into each project to provide a
common, reasonable purchase price of electricity generated by those renewable
energy projects, Thuc said.
Through the tender, the state will understand the real price
of each wind power project to classify the investment rates for those using
European and American equipment and technology, and those using the equipment
and technology from other countries, he added.
This is the foundation to calculate the level of electricity
price support for each project, Thuc explained.
Bui Van Thinh, deputy chairman of the Binh Thuan Wind Power
Association, said that the tender to select potential investors is effective
in many countries where the state budget is spent on planning, calculating
the wind power potential of each area, and clearing the site for wind power
development.
However, in Vietnam, the work has been done by investors for a
long time, so it is hard to apply foreign models.
Recently, some provincial governments with more wind power
potential, such as Ninh Thuan and Binh Thuan, have urged investors to speed
up their projects, and threatened to revoke the licenses if they are delayed
for too long, Thinh said.
Huge potential to tap
Vietnam has great potential for the development of wind power
and solar energy, many experts remarked at the event.
With almost 3,400 kilometers of coastline and an average wind
speed of six meters per second, the wind energy potentialities of Vietnam are
estimated to reach about 500 to 1,000 kWh per square meters each year.
In Vietnam, the potential for wind power development has been
scattered in 22 coastal provinces across the country, including many
provinces which have planned the development of wind power until 2020, such
as Quang Tri (110 MW), Binh Thuan (700 MW) , Ninh Thuan (220 MW), Soc Trang
(200 MW), Ben Tre (150 MW ).
There are 52 other wind power projects in the research
processes with a total capacity of 4,252 MW.
It is expected that by 2030 renewable energy will account for
six percent of the national electricity output.
According to Thuc from the New and Renewable Energy
Department, the ministry has recently submitted the national renewable energy
development strategy to the prime minister for consideration and approval,
which is expected to be passed by early 2016.
Through the ministry’s research, hydropower sources in Vietnam
have been exploited fully, and the country will have to import coal for
electricity production in the near future given the current limitations of
domestic supply, Thuc said.
Currently, among the total national electricity output
annually, thermal power, hydropower, gas-fueled power and oil-fueled power
make up about 34 percent, 43 percent, 19 percent, and 4 percent,
respectively, he said.
As a result, Vietnam will have to strengthen the development
of renewable energy to offset the use of fossil fuels, Thuc added.
At present, as the equipment required for utilizing wind power
cannot be produced domestically, a high cost of investment is incurred,
including expenses for transporting equipment from abroad which account for
15-17 percent of the total expenditures.
Another major barrier for wind power investors is low purchase
price, which currently sits at 7.8 cents/kWh and 9.8 cents/kWh for
electricity generated by on-shore and offshore projects, respectively.
THOAI TRAN/TUOI TRE NEWS
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Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 11, 2015
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