Clarke Energy announces African power contracts

Lake Kivu

General Electric’s (GE) Distributed Power business today announced that Clarke Energy has been named Symbion Power’s preferred bidder for two important power plants in Rwanda, which will generate power from biogas from deep below Lake Kivu.

This announcement coincides with a British Government trade delegation’s visit to Africa, which Knowsleys-based Clarke Energy is participating in.

Clarke Energy will deliver approximately 25 of GE’s J620 3-megawatt Jenbacher gas engines across Symbion’s Kivu 56 and KP1 power plants, which are located on the shores of Lake Kivu in Rwanda.

The Merseyside company will also create jobs in Rwanda to support the servicing of the engines.

Symbion Power is an independent power producer that has secured the rights to deliver two projects in Rwanda on Lake Kivu.

The Kivu 56 project is planned to export 56MW of power into the Rwandan grid under a 25-year concession.

KP1 originated as an earlier pilot project, and Symbion has acquired the plant and will upgrade it from 3.6MW to 25MW, which will be delivered to the Rwandan grid system under a separate 25-year concession.

Symbion Power’s founder and chief executive, Paul Hinks, said: “After a long and rigorous competitive process, we have selected Clarke Energy, using GE’s Jenbacher gas engines, as our preferred technology provider.

“These two power projects at Lake Kivu will increase capacity by 81MW and significantly reduce the current cost of generation in Rwanda.”

Lake Kivu, one of the African Great Lakes, is a unique body of water in the world, which at its base is saturated with biogas that is a combination of methane and carbon dioxide gases.

This gas is produced by way of the unique combination of 500-meters depth, heat originating from magma under the rift valley, and microbes, breaking down organic material that falls from higher in the lake.

The surface of the lake is 1,460m above sea level.

Unlike normal biogas, which is produced in anaerobic digesters, organic process plants process biodegradable waste, so at the base of the lake, the biogas contains only 20% methane.

This level is lower than that required even in a Jenbacher gas engine.

The plan is to strip the carbon dioxide — which forms the balance of the volume of the gas — using water, and then to put the gas into reciprocating gas engines located at discrete power stations on the shores of the lake.

The electricity from the engines will be put directly into Rwanda’s electricity distribution network.

Clarke Energy’s managing director in Africa, Alan Fletcher, said: “We are delighted to have been named preferred contractor by Symbion Power for these two key projects on the shores of Lake Kivu.

“Our proposed solution is able to deliver reliable supplies of sustainable energy and support jobs in Rwanda and the United Kingdom.”

Leon van Vuuren, general manager, global sales and commercial operations for GE’s Distributed
Power business, said: “GE’s Jenbacher gas engines will provide lower emissions, higher efficiency and increased capacity for Symbion Power’s projects, helping to solve the energy challenges in the region.”

Clarke Energy employs more than 1,100 staff and has in excess of 6,300MW of Jenbacher generation equipment installed globally.

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