Canada
energy firm eyes $150 mln solar power plant in Vietnam
Canadian company CMX Renewable
Energy Inc. has sought a license to build a 150-megawatt solar power plant in
the central province of Ninh Thuan at an estimated cost of US$150 million,
news website Dau Tu reported Sunday.
Around
1 percent of the plant's output would be provided free to locals, a company
executive was quoted as telling the province's authorities at a meeting.
CMX
is the latest foreign investor to have expressed interest in producing solar
energy in Vietnam even as the government is drafting policies to encourage
private investment in the sector.
According
to one of the plans being considered by the government, state monopoly
Electricity of Vietnam and other electricity distributors will be obliged to
buy all the output from solar power plants in 10-20 years, the government's
website reported.
The
plants are also expected to get special treatment with respect to taxes and
land, it said.
With
around 2,000-2,500 hours of sunlight annually, Vietnam's solar energy
potential is considered to be the equivalent of 43.9 million tons of oil a
year.
However,
the country's first solar power plant will not go on stream until next year.
It is a 19.2-megawatt plant being built in the central province of Quang Ngai
by Vietnamese investor Thien Tan Group at an estimated VND862 billion ($36.12
million).
Last
year South Korea's SolarPark Korea Company sought to build a 300-megawatt
plant in another central province, Ha Tinh, at $650 million.
Another
Korean investor, conglomerate Hanwha, also reportedly planned to invest $200
million in developing a 100-200-megawatt plant in Thua Thien-Hue.
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Thứ Hai, 2 tháng 5, 2016
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