F
firefox
Hi Lads;
The Koreans & the Amercians are building a new electric power plant in Kuwait.
See this:
‘Next year, we will get over the problem,’ when the first phase of a power plant under construction will come online adding about 1,320 megawatts of new capacity, the minister said.
In September 2009, Kuwait signed a 2.7-billion-dollar (2.2-billion-euro) deal with US and Korean firms to build a 2,000-megawatt power plant that is due to come online next summer and be fully operational by mid-2012.
Prime Minister Shaikh Nasser Mohammed Al Ahmad Al Sabah said at the time that Kuwait aims to double power capacity to more than 20,000 megawatts during the next five years.
Last month, Kuwait’s parliament passed a law to set up shareholding companies to build new power and water desalination plants in the first privatisation of the sector.
The wealthy Gulf emirate, which operates a cradle-to-grave welfare policy for Kuwaiti nationals, sells power at highly subsidised rates to its 1.1 million citizens and 2.35 million foreign residents. [/COLOR
Any idea how many homes on average could use this amount this amount of power?
What will this power plant use as fuel?
The Koreans & the Amercians are building a new electric power plant in Kuwait.
See this:
‘Next year, we will get over the problem,’ when the first phase of a power plant under construction will come online adding about 1,320 megawatts of new capacity, the minister said.
In September 2009, Kuwait signed a 2.7-billion-dollar (2.2-billion-euro) deal with US and Korean firms to build a 2,000-megawatt power plant that is due to come online next summer and be fully operational by mid-2012.
Prime Minister Shaikh Nasser Mohammed Al Ahmad Al Sabah said at the time that Kuwait aims to double power capacity to more than 20,000 megawatts during the next five years.
Last month, Kuwait’s parliament passed a law to set up shareholding companies to build new power and water desalination plants in the first privatisation of the sector.
The wealthy Gulf emirate, which operates a cradle-to-grave welfare policy for Kuwaiti nationals, sells power at highly subsidised rates to its 1.1 million citizens and 2.35 million foreign residents. [/COLOR
Any idea how many homes on average could use this amount this amount of power?
What will this power plant use as fuel?