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DAM-L LS: Two Articles on Hydro in Vietnam (fwd)



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From owner-irn-mekong@netvista.net  Wed Oct  4 16:54:43 2000
Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2000 13:47:37 -0700 (PDT)
Message-Id: <200010042047.e94Klb916656@DaVinci.NetVista.net>
subject: LS: Two Articles on Hydro in Vietnam
Sender: owner-irn-mekong@netvista.net
Precedence: bulk

 >
 >                     Copyright 2000 Agence France Presse
 >                             Agence France Presse
 >
 >                October 2, 2000, Monday 10:02 AM, Eastern Time
 >
 >    HEADLINE: Vietnam secures 300 million dollars in loans from China
 >    DATELINE: HANOI, Oct 2
 >
 >       Vietnam secured loans worth 300 million dollars to carry out four
 >    key industrial projects during a visit to Beijing last week by Prime
 >    Minister Phan Van Khai, industry ministry officials said Monday.
 >    The loans will fund construction of two hydroelectric power stations
 >    -- Cai Ngan in the northern town of Thai Nguyen and Rao Quan in the
 >    central province of Quang Tri -- as well as a new copper smelter in
 >    the northern province of Lao Cai and a fertilizer plant in the port
 >    city of Danang.
 >    The loans will be repayable over 15 years at interest rates of between
 >    4.02 and 4.75 percent and the agreements stipulate that 70 percent of
 >    the supply contracts will go to Chinese firms, the head of the
 >    ministry's international cooperation department, Tran Minh Huan, told
 >    AFP.
 >    During a visit to Hanoi by Chinese Prime Minister Zhu Rongji last
 >    December, Vietnam secured loans worth 55 million dollars to fund the
 >    renovation of two major industrial plants built with Chinese aid
 >    during the Vietnam War -- the Thai Nguyen steel mill and the Bac Giang
 >    fertilizer plant.
 >    Economic links between the two communist neighbours have blossomed
 >    with the thaw in relations of recent years and two-way trade reached
 >    1.5 billion dollars in 1999.
 >    ltl-kir/bro
 >

 > Copyright 2000 British Broadcasting Corporation
 > BBC Monitoring Asia Pacific - Economic
 > Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitoring
 >
 > October 2, 2000, Monday
 >
 > HEADLINE: Vietnam's hydroelectricity capacity reviewed
 > SOURCE: VNA news agency web site, Hanoi, in English 30 Sep 00
 >
 > Text of report by the Vietnamese news agency VNA web site
 > Hanoi, 30th September: Vietnam's nine hydropower plants currently make
 > up 53 per cent of the energy sector's capacity, but they produced
 > 23,739m kWh or 58.7 per cent of the country's output in 1999.
 > The nine hydropower plants are of various sizes, some small like Dray
 > Hlinh, others medium like Da Nhim, Thac Ba, Thac Mo and Tri An, and
 > still others large like Hoa Binh and Yaly.
 > The largest one is the Hoa Binh Hydropower Plant, which was built in
 > 1980 in the northern mountainous province of Hoa Binh with assistance
 > from the former Soviet Union. The plant accounted for 40 per cent of
 > the country's capacity, but 60 per cent of its electricity output. It
 > has to date supplied 61bn kWh to the national grid, an average of
 > 8.16bn kWh a year. With a reservoir capable of holding as much as 5bn
 > cu.m. of water, the plant has also contributed to the control of
 > flooding in the Red River Delta. For such achievements, the plant has
 > been awarded the title of Labour Hero, the highest distinction for
 > production activities.
 > The second largest hydropower plant is Yaly, currently being built in
 > the central highlands province of Kon Tum. Its first group of
 > generators has been running at full capacity (180 MW) since May this
 > year and the second group is being run on a trial basis. The
 > four-generator-group plant is the largest power project financed,
 > designed and built entirely by Vietnam alone. The 720-MW plant is
 > expected to commission the last generator group by the end of October,
 > 2001.
 > The nine hydropower plants have annually produced 13,973 GWh,
 > representing 30 per cent of the electricity produced by fuel-powered
 > plants. They have also provided irrigation water for 12,000 ha of
 > cultivated land a year.
 > For such reasons, the energy sector has tried to exploit the abundant
 > water resources of the country.
 > The national corporation, Electricity of Vietnam, has updated the
 > technology of older plants, ensuring efficiency while protecting the
 > environment. It has proposed the state approve the building of another
 > 20 power plants with a combined capacity of 35,000 MW, including
 > 11,000 MW from hydropower plants, in the 2001-2020 period. Prominent
 > among the proposed plants is a hydropower plant in the northern
 > mountainous province of Son La. The 3,600 MW plant is designed to
 > generate 14bn kWh a year. It will also help increase the capacity of
 > the Hoa Binh plant by 3m kWh a year (equivalent to a 800 MW plant).
 > 


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