development

April 21 2009

Bangladesh: Quick energy fix mulled

Faced with a deep energy crisis due to gas shortage that cannot be overcome overnight, the government considers importing Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), increasing efficiency of bulk gas users to reduce demands and setting standards to promote energy efficient electrical equipment, says Dr Towfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury, energy adviser to the prime minister.

India: Heat wave continues, outages become longer

You know peak summer has arrived when an electricity crisis grapples the city. As the temperature remained over 40 degree mark, large parts of the capital went without power for long durations in the morning and afternoon hours. Discoms held up their hands in helplessness, claiming that the problem was the low frequency in the Northern Grid. They also claimed that they had made sufficient tie ups for the summer load.

The problem recurs every summer when the demand shoots up in Delhi as well as in other states. With Delhi highly dependent on the grid for meeting consumer load, the capital has to suffer rotational loadshedding when the grid trips on account of overdrawing by other states.

Malaysia: East Coast load shedding done on purpose - Jimmy

SRI Tanjung Assemblyman Jimmy Wong claimed frequent power cuts due to load shedding in the East Coast were deliberate and meant "to punish the people there for objecting to the coal-fired power plant".

"I want to talk about the frequent electricity disruptions perhaps not only in Tawau but throughout the East Coast. I want to ask the Infrastructure Development Minister why this only happens in our place," he said.

"I was informed that the power shedding is done purposely to teach the people from Sandakan up to Tawau for objecting to the coal-fired power plant," he claimed.

Namibia: Kudu gas project delayed

Namibia and Angola plan to build a joint $7 billion hydro power plant on a river that runs along their common border to produce 400 megawatts of electricity, a senior government official said on Tuesday.
Daniel Zaire, the deputy director for electricity at the Namibian ministry of mines and energy, told Reuters the construction of the project on the Kunene river would start by next March, and would be carried out by Brazilian companies.

Nigeria: Petrol truckers strike cripples Nigerian cities

A strike by Nigerian petrol tanker drivers has triggered an acute gasoline and diesel shortage in the commercial capital Lagos, crippling business in Africa's top oil-producer on Tuesday.

Most petrol stations in Lagos and the inland capital Abuja were without gasoline as the strike called by the Petrol Tanker Drivers' unit of the oil workers' union NUPENG entered a fourth day.

Yemen: Frequency of blackouts increases

Government negotiations with a British Company over buying power generators are well underway, according to official sources. These power generators are expected to bring the deteriorating electricity situation to an end.

The duration of electricity cuts have noticeably increased. On Friday, power outages across the capital lasted for up to four hours causing losses to businesses and disrupting studies.

The blackouts were due to the heavy rains which damaged a large part of the electricity station’s power generators, according to officials in the Ministry of Electricity.

April 10 2009

Argentina: Advierten en Córdoba que falta gasoil en plena cosecha

Just when the harvest of coarse grains begins, there were supply problems in many oil service stations in the interior of Cordova. The fuel shortage was discussed by producers across the province. The president of the Federation of vending Raul Castellanos, who acknowledged the problem late last week.

"It's true: the diesel has been lacking. Many stations have not been getting the volumes needed to supply the demand, particularly in the trademark YPF and Petrobras," he said.

Cambodia: Energy plan to focus on rural Cambodia

THE Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy, the World Bank and United Kingdom's Department for International Development (DFID) are working on a major initiative to boost rural renewable energy programs and electrify rural areas, officials said this week.

The government hopes the project will help address chronic power shortages that increase the cost of doing business in Cambodia and make the country reliant on imported fossil fuels. The program is funded by international grants to supply rural areas with solar panels, biodigesters, mini-hydroplants and biogas generators.

India: Over half the power capacity addition target missed last fiscal

Fresh power capacity addition has fallen short of target by over a half in the year 2008-09, because of the delay in supply of critical components in thermal projects and non-availability of fuel.

According to the latest data provided by the Central Electricity Authority (CEA), only 4,900 Mw, or 44 per cent of the targeted addition of about 11,061 Mw, was achieved in the twelve months ended March 31, 2009.

Pakistan: IESCO power demand, supply gap 190 MW

The power supply and demand gap on Thursday reached at 190 MW in Islamabad Electric Supply Company (IESCO) region, said IESCO.

According to company’s official, total power supply was 831 MW in IESCO region against demand of 1,020 MW due to increase in electricity consumption by the consumers.

Pakistan: Karachi hit by worst power shortfall

The unannounced power outages ranging from eight to ten hours continue in Karachi as the power crisis touches its worst state here in metropolis while residents are facing the music.

As the hot weather is getting intensified with the passage of the time, the power shortfall has turned worst while many commercial and industrial areas are testifying 8 to 10 hours’ unannounced power breakdown affecting adversely the daily life of poor people.

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