person:mohammad hamed

  • ‘Deal on oil shale-fuelled power plant to be signed this month’ | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/deal-on-oil-shale-fuelled-power-plant-to-be-signed-this-month

    The government on Thursday said it will sign an agreement this month for the construction of the country’s first oil shale-fuelled power plant after agreeing with Enefit on the final details of the $2.1 billion project.

    Jordan and the joint Estonian-Malaysian consortium agreed that the price per kilowatt hour that the government will buy from the plant will be levelised, ranging from a minimum of 78 fils per kilowatt hour to a maximum of 99 fils per kilowatt hour, Energy Minister Mohammad Hamed told The Jordan Times in an interview on Thursday.

    Reaching a final agreement on the price paves the way for going ahead with the project after the consortium threatened in early May to abandon the project if no final agreement is sealed with the government by mid-June.

    “The draft of the final agreement is now complete and was sent to the Cabinet for endorsement,” Hamed said, adding that the two sides will sign the power purchase agreement after the Council of Ministers approves the deal.

    The agreement will be for 30 years, with the option of being extended to 40 years, according to the minister, who noted that the plant will have a 470-megawatt capacity.

    The government decided to give Enefit three to six months to reach financial closure for the project, Hamed said, adding that once financial closure is achieved the company has 36 months to complete the power plant.

    “I expect the plant to be ready and connected to the grid by late 2017,” he said.

    Enefit Jordan BV is owned by Enefit (Eesti Energia AS), YTL Power International Berhad and Near East Investments Limited.

    Enefit mandated the Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, supported by China Export & Credit Insurance Corp., to arrange $1.4b of debt financing for the planned plant.

    #pétrole_de_schiste #pétrole_de_roche #Jordanie #énergie #électricité #China

  • Nouveaux projets éoliens et solaires signés en Jordanie
    Jordan inks 12 deals for solar-run power plants | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/jordan-inks-12-deals-for-solar-run-power-plants

    Jordan on Monday signed deals with two companies to build two solar energy-run power plants, Energy Minister Mohammad Hamed said.

    http://jordantimes.com/spanish-firm-selected-to-build-wind-power-plant----hamed

    Jordan will sign an agreement with Spain’s Elecnor this month to build a $150 million wind-operated power plant in the southern city of Maan, according to Energy Minister Mohammad Hamed.

    The 75-megawatt power plant will be funded by a grant from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states and is expected to be connected to the grid in the first quarter of 2015, Hamed said in an interview with The Jordan Times on Monday.

    #Jordan
    #electricité
    #énergie
    #solaire
    #éolien

  • Lancement (pour de vrai cette fois) de la première centrale solaire en Jordanie - la technologie n’est pas précisée mais ce projet s’intègre dans un complexe qui à terme mêlera CSP et photovoltaic

    Gov’t buys sun-generated electricity for first time | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/govt-buys-sun-generated-electricity-for-first-time

    The Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry and Shams Maan Company on Monday signed an agreement by which the former would buy from the latter electricity generated from solar energy with a capacity of 50 megawatts at the Maan Development Area (MDA).

    Energy Minister Mohammad Hamed said that this project is the first of its kind in Jordan and the largest in the region regarding its 50-megawatt capacity. He noted that the project will provide 500 job opportunities during the building and installation phase, and another 50 during the operation and maintenance phase.

    According to a ministry statement after signing the agreement, carried by the Jordan News Agency, Petra, the investment value of this project will be around $150 million, which will produce 160 gigawatts of clean electrical power annually. The project is scheduled to operate in 2015.

    Signing similar agreements with other producers will follow during the next two weeks, the statement said.

    Hamed noted that most solar energy projects are located in MDA, with direct investment value of about $500 million, providing about 2,000 job opportunities in the building and installation phase, and 400 during the operation and maintenance phase during the project life of 20 years.

    In May 2012, the ministry launched the first phase of direct tenders, which resulted in signing 30 memoranda of understanding with qualified companies to develop projects of wind and solar energies with total capacity of about 850 megawatts in different regions in the Kingdom.

    En complément : http://www.ecomena.org/tag/shams-maan-project
    Sur les préparatifs de ce projet et notamment son économie politique et territoriale, voir Verdeil, Éric. 2011, Villes, énergie et développement durable en Jordanie  : entre néolibéralisme et improbable décentralisation, dans Expérimenter la « ville durable » au sud de la Méditerranée. Chercheurs et professionnels en dialogues, éd par. Pierre-Arnaud Barthel et Lamia Zaki, Editions de l’Aube (coll. Villes et territoires). p. 291-319. EN accès libre : http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00460974/fr

    • Un autre projet identitque :
      http://jordantimes.com/kingdom-signs-24m-deal-for-solar-run-power-generation-plant

      Jordan on Tuesday signed a $24 million agreement with Arabia One for Clean Energy Investments to build a solar-run power generation plant.

      The plant, which will be located in Maan, some 220km south of Amman, will have a total capacity of 10 megawatts, Energy Minister Mohammad Hamed told The Jordan Times.

      “This project is of great importance to the country and is part of several projects that Jordan seeks to implement to increase the production of electricity through renewable energy,” the minister said.

      The government will sign agreements with several local and international companies before the end of this month to build 10 solar energy projects with a total capacity of 140 megawatts, Hamed said in a phone interview.

      Mohannad Khalifeh, chairman of Arabia One, said the company is owned by a group of Jordanian, South Korean and Spanish investors.

      The plant is expected to be operational and connected to the grid in the last quarter of 2015, he told The Jordan Times over the phone.

      The company reached an agreement with the government to sell it electricity from the plant at JD0.12 per kilowatt hour, Khalifeh added.

      “Electricity generated through solar energy projects such as ours is much cheaper than energy produced through diesel or heavy fuel,” he noted.

      On Monday, the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry signed an agreement with the Shams Maan Company under which it will buy electricity generated by a solar power plant with 50-megawatt capacity at the Maan Development Area from the firm.

      Hamed said the project is the first of its kind in Jordan and the largest in the region.

      According to the ministry, the investment value of this project, which will produce 160 gigawatts of clean electrical power annually, will be around $150 million. The project is scheduled to be operational in 2015.

  • 2018 will be turning point in Jordan’s energy sector — minister | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/2018-will-be-turning-point-in-jordans-energy-sector----minister

    Starting 2018, Jordan’s energy sector will start to reap the fruits of multibillion-dollar projects that entail producing oil locally and generating electricity using clean techniques, Energy Minister Mohammad Hamed has said.

    Jordan, which currently imports about 96 per cent of its energy needs costing annually about 20 per cent of the gross domestic product, will not only be able to fulfil its energy needs but will also be capable of exporting energy when a series of energy projects in different areas go operational in 2018, the minister said in a recent interview with The Jordan Times.

    #schistes_bitumineux #énergie_solaire (mais quelle technique ?) #gaz_naturel #énergie #électricité
    Les grands travaux énergétiques de la Jordanie, un tour d’horizon (sans le nucléaire ici)

  • La Jordanie choisit la firme russe Rosatom pour construire son premier réacteur nucléaire
    Russian firm set to build Jordan’s first nuclear plants | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/russian-firm-set-to-build-jordans-first-nuclear-plants
    Cette décision est un nouveau revers pour AREVA, déjà écarté aux Emirats Arabes Unis et qui présentait ici un réacteur expérimental de technologie plus simple et moins couteuse, ATMEA.
    Le montage financier serait un BOT où la firme russe apportera 49% du capital. On peut imaginer que les garanties financières seront conséquentes. Elles porteront sur le prix de l’électricité, qui est pourtant un sujet extrêmement controversé depuis plusieurs années, les hausses étant l’un des mobiles des manifestations qui agitent le pays.
    Le troisième point notable concerne la localisation. D’abord déplacé de Aqaba vers Balaama près de Mafraq, officiellement à cause des problèmes de sécurité sismique mais aussi à cause des réticences israéliennes et américaines (peut être aussi saoudiennes), le projet a fait l’objet dans ce nouveau site de nombreuses contestations. C’est donc un troisième site qui a été retenu, plus éloigné des zones habitées mais néanmoins assez proche de la grande usine d’assainissement de Khirbet Samra, près de Zarqa, dont les eaux doivent être réutilisées pour le refroidissement de la nouvelle centrale.
    Je ne sais pas exactement où se situe l’emplacement choisi mais sur la photo satalitte ci-dessous, on a les principaux repères spatiaux concernés : l’agglomération d’Amman-Zarqa, sur la partie ouest de l’image. Au nord ouest, dans son prolongement, l’usine d’assainissement de l’agglomération de Khirbet Samra. Dans le coin sud-est, la localité de Qusayr Amra, connue pour ses vestiges archéologiques (château d’époque ommeyade). C’est en gros entre ces trois pôles que doit se localiser la centrale.

    As part of the decision, ratified by the Prime Ministry on Sunday, the government and the Russian firm have entered negotiations over electricity pricing in order to reach a final agreement and break ground on the reactors by 2015.

    “We have entered the second stage of negotiations with Rosatom, which we hope will lead to a final agreement and secure the country’s energy future,” Jordan Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Khaled Toukan said during a joint press conference with the ministers of environment and energy Taher Shakhshir and Mohammad Hamed.

    Energy officials listed the safety track record of the firm’s AES92 VVER1000 reactor technology among the main advantages of the Russian bid, which beat out shortlisted French firm AREVA’s experimental ATMEA1 reactor and Canadian AECL’s
    CANDU technology.

    “This is a licensed technology that has a proven safety record in several European countries and elsewhere, which was important in our decision,” Toukan said.

    Another leading factor is believed to be the financial arrangements laid out in the proposal, under which Rosatom has agreed to take on 49 per cent of the plants’ $10 billion construction and operation costs on a build-own-operate basis, with the government shouldering the remaining 51 per cent and retaining a majority share in the plants.

    According to Toukan, the government will seek out local public and private investors to take part in a joint utility and shareholding company to be established by the government and Rosatom to maintain the reactors as a “Jordanian national venture”.

    The proposal mirrors a similar agreement struck by Rosatom and Turkey in 2010, under which the firm is set to construct four 1,000MW reactors at a $20 billion price tag.

    Although the final prices of electricity generated by the reactors — to be determined by the Russian firm and the government in upcoming negotiations — will include a profit margin for the firm, energy officials remained confident that tariffs will remain “well below” current energy costs in the country.

    “At the end of the day, electricity prices will not only be much lower than fossil fuels, they will be competitive with oil shale, natural gas and renewable energy,” Toukan said.

    Officials say the deal aims to help achieve energy independence in Jordan, which imports around 97 per cent of its energy needs at a cost of over one-fifth of the gross domestic product, and bring stability to a sector that has been impacted by ongoing disruptions in Egyptian gas supplies and fluctuations in international oil prices.

    “Electricity distributors can no longer handle the sharp ups and downs in international oil prices,” Hamed told reporters.

    “Nuclear energy will help solve this instability,” he added.

    Reactor site ‘approved’

    Meanwhile, energy officials unveiled the final designated location for the planned nuclear power plants.

    According to Toukan, Rosatom is set to build the country’s first reactors at a site near Qusayr Amra, some 60 kilometres northeast of Amman and at the edge of the northern desert, after the location was approved in Sunday’s Cabinet decision.

    Officials listed the site’s geographic location, some 30 kilometres away from the nearest residential area and its proximity to the Khirbet Samra Wastewater Treatment Plant, among its strategic advantages.

    The choice of a site for the reactors has been subject to intense public scrutiny over the past four years as officials shifted the planned location from the Red Sea Port of Aqaba to the town of Balaama, outside the northern city of Mafraq.

    Under initial plans, the reactors are to rely on some 500 million cubic metres of water annually from the Khirbet Samra plant, which is some 20 kilometres away from Qusayr Amra, marking them as the second in the world to utilise wastewater for cooling purposes.


    #Jordanie
    #Amman
    #centrale_nucléaire
    #énergie
    #électricité