Under its new design, procurement and construction (EPC) contract, TSK will install a 20 MWp solar power plant 3km from Cuamba, a town in the Niassa province of Mozambique. The solar PV plant will be equipped with a lithium battery storage system with a capacity of 1.86 MVA/7.42 MW/h.
The electricity storage system will stabilise the grid of the state-owned Electricidade de Moçambique (EDM) by continuously injecting electricity into the grid from an existing 33/110 kV substation. TSK will also build a 400m power line to connect the plant and its storage system to the national grid. The Gijón, Spain-based company has also agreed to operate and maintain the solar power plant for five years from the date the plant is commissioned.
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TSK was awarded the contract by the project developer, independent power producer (IPP) Globeleq. The UK company already has a 25-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with EDM. IPP is developing the Cuamba solar project in partnership with Source Capital, a private equity firm based in Georgia, USA. Globeleq estimates that its 20 MWp solar plant will avoid 630,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions over the 25-year life of the plant.
Globeleq is supporting the roll-out of Mozambique’s energy strategy and is looking to build more plants in the East African country. The company, headed by Mike Scholey, has pre-qualified for the construction of the Dondo solar photovoltaic plant (40 MWp) in the province of Sofala. The IPP wants to develop this other project in partnership with Akuo Energy, a renewable energy producer based in Paris, France.
Jean Marie Takouleu