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Powering development in Myanmar

Powering sustainable development in Myanmar

  • The challenge

    Providing an alternative to hydropower during Myanmar's dry season

  • The Solution

    A 95 MW interim natural gas plant up and working within 120 days

  • The Impact

    Year-round power and a legacy of a local, skilled workforce

Client:Myanmar Electric Power Enterprise (MEPE)

Location:Myingyan district, Myanmar

Sectors:Utilities

The challenge

A dry season alternative to hydropower

Myanmar is changing fast, and relies on constant and reliable power to fuel development. But with 70 per cent of the country’s electricity coming from hydropower and a dry season that lasts from October to May, this was a problem. The Myanmar Electric Power Enterprise (MEPE) started to look for a partner who could install and run an interim power station during the dry months and beyond. After a competitive bid, they asked us to work with them to bring uninterrupted power to the Myingyan district.

70Myanmar energy from hydropower
95MWInterim power needed urgently
120daysTo deliver the project
77Of the workforce from Myanmar

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The solution

An interim power plant in 120 days

The challenges here were enormous. The sheer scale of the project meant we needed to source equipment by land, sea and air from 12 different locations around the world. Then our logistics team had to clear it through customs, and bring it through difficult terrain to the site on time. We then installed 92 generators along with transformers, gas-insulated switchgear and a 6 km long 132 kV transmission line connected to the incoming switch bay at the Myingyan substation. Finally, using local natural gas from the China-Myanmar pipeline, we worked with MEPE to set up a high-pressure reduction system, to capture and convert the gas into an efficient fuel source.

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