ADB loan for Nepal to tackle energy crisis

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Press Trust of India Kathmandu
Last Updated : Jul 07 2014 | 6:53 PM IST
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved a USD 180 million soft loan to help Nepal overcome its crippling power shortage and upgrade and expand transmission lines to export surplus power to neighbouring India.
"Right now, limited generating capacity and weak power transmission and distribution networks mean two thirds of households in Nepal have no electricity and many of those who suffer power cuts for up to 12 hours a day during the dry season," said Lei Zhang, Energy Specialist with ADB's South Asia Department.
"There's a pressing need to provide more energy to domestic customers and harness more clean energy for sale overseas when the country has surpluses."
The loan will help Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) finance a substantial upgrade and expansion of transmission and distribution lines and substations, allowing the transfer of up to 2,000 megawatts (MW) of power to main load centers in the Kathmandu Valley, according to a ADB statement.
"As well as meeting domestic needs, this network expansion will give Nepal the ability to export at least 1,200 MW of electricity to India, once a second 400 kilovolt cross-border transmission line from Bardaghat to Gorakhpur in India is complete."
With six new hydropower plants due to come on stream over the next 3 to 6 years, the country expects to have a substantial wet season supply surplus for export by 2018, points out ADB.
The project will also help Alternative Energy Promotion Centre (AEPC) provide electricity to the hard-to-reach rural communities, with mini-grid renewable energy systems, including mini hydroelectric, solar and wind generation, through provision of an ADB credit line and the ADB-administered Strategic Climate Fund.
Through an associated capacity development technical assistance, the project will support AEPC to develop a feasibility study for a large-scale wind farm.
The loan, from ADB's concessional resources, will be complemented by a cofinancing loan of usd 120 million from the European Investment Bank, a USD 60 million grant from the Government of Norway, and an USD 11.2 million grant from the ADB-administered Strategic Climate Fund, the statement said.
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First Published: Jul 07 2014 | 6:53 PM IST

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