New power plant to significantly boost GPL’s capacity – CEO

…will have 2M gallon fuel storage capacity

Government’s plan to end power outages is moving apace, with work to set up the new powerplant at Garden of Eden, East Bank Demerara already some 58 per cent completed.

Minister within the Public Works Ministry, Deodat Indar, along with GPL’s CEO, Albert Gordon, and Divisional Director of Engineering Services, with responsibility for the Wartsila project, Ryan Ross, inspecting the ongoing work at Garden of Eden, East Bank Demerara (DPI Photo)

The five Wartsila generators which are the main components of the 46.5MW powerplant arrived in Guyana last week, and on Wednesday, Minister within the Public Works Ministry, Deodat Indar, toured the plant, where he was quoted by the Department of Public Information as saying that each generator weighs approximately 150 metric tonnes and has a 9.3MW output.
“For sets that huge, there must be below-surface civil works, so that is currently being done, and it will run concurrently with the above civil works. The base where the sets are to be located, that part is already completed, but there is more work that needs to be done,” the Minister explained during a tour of the facility on Wednesday.

Construction work ongoing at the new dual-fire powerplant site

The powerplant is set to be commissioned by the end of April 2021.
According to DPI, Minister Indar said the 46.5 megawatts will be added to the five megawatts which are being sourced from Giftland, and by next month there should be an additional 10 megawatts. Altogether, the electricity power would be able to meet the existing demand.
Meanwhile, Chief Executive Officer of the Guyana Power and Light (GPL), Albert Gordon, explained that over the past years Guyana has endured “very slim reserve margin” and a low back-up capacity. With the new intervention, the power load will be given a significant boost.
The dual-fuel plant is the beginning of the transition to natural gas. “It will burn heavy fuel oil, which is cheap. It will allow us to transition to natural gas, and will burn natural gas more efficiently,” Gordon said.
Meanwhile, Divisional Director of Engineering Services, with responsibility for the Wartsila project, Ryan Ross, said the powerplant will have a two-million-gallon fuel storage capacity.
He added that the foundation for the generators is complete, while work on the rest of the structure to house the generators is ongoing, with some 58 per cent of the project finished.
The initiative is GPL’s largest generation project to date. The generators arrived on Guyana’s shores on November 5 at the John Fernandes Wharf, after leaving Finland on October 13.