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Tbilisi: One more year: Enguri dam repairs must wait

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  • Tbilisi: One more year: Enguri dam repairs must wait

    The Messenger, Georgia
    April 12 2005

    One more year: Enguri dam repairs must wait
    Government delays overhaul because import line from Russia remains
    disabled; other breakdowns cause outages on Monday
    By Christina Tashkevich


    Gardabani power plant close to Tbilisi
    Unnerved by the loss of the Kavkasioni import line from Russia, the
    Georgian Ministry of Energy has decided to postpone major repairs to
    the Enguri hydroelectric station by a year.

    Enguri, the country's largest hydroelectric station, currently has
    two working units, which can produce 200 megawatts of electricity
    each. A full overhaul of the stations remaining three units, which
    can only take place in the spring, could increase its output
    potential to 1,000 megawatts but the government has delayed the
    overhaul because another major electricity source, the Kazkasioni
    line, has been knocked out by landslides.

    Despite this, the Ministry of Energy says parts of the Enguri station
    will still be rehabilitated this year. The station will be turned off
    in May for 20-30 days for the repair works. The major overhaul, now
    set for spring 2006, is slated to take twice as long.

    As a result of the upcoming repairs, "the energy system will be
    guaranteed against frequent accidents on the Enguri units," Deputy
    Minister of Energy Aleksander Khetaguri said on Monday.

    The ministry stated on Monday that there will be no electricity
    crisis created by the repairs at Enguri because in May the water
    levels at other hydroelectric dams are expected to be high.

    Originally, the station was scheduled to stop production in April for
    major repairs but because of the accident on the Kavkasioni high
    voltage transmission line, the repairs were postponed.

    General Director of the Georgian State Electric System Joe Corbett
    said on Monday, however, that the repair work at Enguri in May will
    still make a positive contributions to the system. "It is good from
    the generation point of view that the gate on unit one will be
    repaired," he told The Messenger.

    Because of high snowfall and rugged terrain, officials have still
    been unable to access the damaged section of the line, which
    transmits 500 kilovolts from Russia.

    Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli recently said that restoring
    Kavkasioni to permit renewed imports from Russia is of "vital
    importance" before rehabilitating Enguri.

    "It's very important to us to resume imports from Russia at the level
    we need while Enguri is being rehabilitated," he said at the
    beginning of April, adding that the rehabilitation of Enguri would
    help prevent similar crises in the future.

    With the Kavkasioni line still inoperable, Georgia's only other major
    outside source of electricity is from Armenia through another
    transmission line.

    "We need both Enguri and Kavkasioni back by July 1," says Corbett,
    adding that he is optimistic the repairs on both will be completed by
    then.

    Proving the need for other sources of light, two major domestic
    production facilities went offline late Sunday leaving most of
    Tbilisi, and the country, without electricity for most of Monday. On
    Sunday night the third and ninth power units in Gardabani were
    switched off because of unspecified emergencies. As a result the
    power grid had to compensate with energy supplies from Enguri.

    "The defect [in the ninth bloc] will be eliminated by April 14," the
    Telasi press office announced on Monday. According to the
    government's official energy plan, Georgia should receive 24-hour
    electricity from October 2006.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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