Rudi A Hydropower Station

Rudi A Hydropower Station (Nepali: रुदी A जलविद्युत आयोजना) is a run-of-river hydro-electric plant located in the Kaski District of Nepal that came into operation in 2019. The flow from the Rudi River is used to generate 8.8 MW electricity.

Rudi A Hydropower Station
Rudi A Hydropower Station is located in Nepal
Rudi A Hydropower Station
Location of Rudi A Hydropower Station in Nepal
Official nameRudi A Hydropower Project
CountryNepal
LocationKaski District
Coordinates28°13′51″N 84°13′00″E / 28.23083°N 84.21667°E / 28.23083; 84.21667
PurposePower
StatusOperational
Opening date19 May 2019
Owner(s)Bindhabasini Hydropower Developmwnt Company Pvt.Ltd
Dam and spillways
Type of damGravity
ImpoundsRudi River (Nepal)
Commission date2075-12-05 BS
TypeRun-of-the-river
Turbines2
Installed capacity8.8 MW

Location and water supply edit

The Rudi River, or Rudi Khola, is one of nine major tributaries of the Madi Nadi with basins that cover more than 11 square miles (28 km2). The others are the Midim, Paste, Birdi, Khalte, Pisti, Risti, Sange and Kalesti.[1] The river's discharge is highest between mid-April and mid-December, when there is most rain, with less water from mid-December to mid-April.[2]

There are two run-of-the-river hydroelectricity plants on the river operated by Bindhyabasini Hydropower Development Company Limited (BHDCL).[3] The 8.8 MW Rudi Khola-A is in Mijuredanda VDC of Kaski District. The 6.6 MW Rudi Khola-B is just upstream in Pasguan VDC, Lamjung District.[4] Rudi A uses discharge from Rudi Khola and Chheduwa Khola, with a catchment area of 53.43 square kilometres (20.63 sq mi).[2] The catchment area of Rudi Khola-B is 35.3 square kilometres (13.6 sq mi), and includes the whole Ligus khola basin.[3]

Construction edit

High Himalayan Hydro Construction Pvt Ltd undertook civil construction, while North Hydro and Engineering was responsible to hydro mechanical construction and Toshiba Plant System and Service Corporation undertook the electro-mechanical construction.[5]

In September 2016 work on Rudi A and Rudi B was halted due to floods and landslides. The main storage site of Rudi A was washed away, and the powerhouse had to be relocated.[6] In July 2018 flooding again caused serious damage to the Rudi Khola A hydropower project, which was under construction. The penstock pipe was destroyed and the recently completed road was badly damaged.[7] The project was almost complete, including construction of the powerhouse, electromechanical connection of the turbine and generator, headworks and transmission line.[8]

Trial power generation from Rudi A began in September 2018.[9] The project began commercial operation on 19 May 2019.[10] Total costs were Rs. 1,555 million, with a debt-equity ration of 68:32.[11]

Technology edit

Rudi A was initially developed as a 6.8MW run-of-the-river hydroelectricity project. Later this was changed to become a tailrace project of Rudi-B. This created greater hydraulic head and volume from the Chhedewa Khola and Rudi Khola to the head pond near Rudi B. The catchment was now 53.43 square kilometres (20.63 sq mi). The design was upgraded to 8.8MW with 276.89 metres (908.4 ft) net head and 3.72 cubic metres per second (131 cu ft/s) discharge at Q40%.[12]

Water is carried 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) to the Rudi A powerhouse from Kaski's Singdi Basin and Lamjung's Singdi Dam.[9] Components include the intake, 138 metres (453 ft) reinforced concrete approach culvert, head pond, 4,932 metres (16,181 ft) headrace pipe, surge tank, 1,070 metres (3,510 ft) penstock connecting the surge tank to the powerhouse, and 72 metres (236 ft) tailrace canal.[13] The powerhouse holds two 4840kW horizontal Pelton wheels, each with a rated discharge of 1.86 cubic metres per second (66 cu ft/s) and rated head of 276.89 metres (908.4 ft). They power two horizontal 3 phase AC synchronous brushless excitation generators, each with rated voltage of 6.3 kV.[14]

Power from Rudi B is carried on a 3.5 kilometres (2.2 mi) 33kV transmission line to the Rudi A switchyard. Power from Rudi A is carried on a 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi) 33kV transmission line to Nepal Electricity Authority's substation at Mijuredanda.[15] The variable flow means the power supply varies seasonally.[2]

Commercial arrangements edit

The plant is owned and developed by Bindhabasini Hydropower Development Company Pvt.Ltd. (BHDCL), an Independent Power Producer of Nepal. BHDCL has a 30-year power purchase agreement with Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) with contracted energy of 46,860,000 units for Rudi A and 33,210,000 units for Rudi B. Higher tariffs apply in the dry season than the wet season.[11]

The generation licence will expire in 2105-09-11 BS, after which the plant will be handed over to the government. [16] The power station is connected to the national grid and the electricity is sold to Nepal Electricity Authority.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Khanal 2004, p. 69.
  2. ^ a b c Grading Rationale, p. 2.
  3. ^ a b Rudi Khola-B: BHDC.
  4. ^ Bindhyabasini Hydropower Company to issue...
  5. ^ Rudi ‘A’ hydroproject to generate electricity...
  6. ^ Saroj Bhattarai 2016.
  7. ^ Rana 2018.
  8. ^ Navin Raj Kuinkel 2018.
  9. ^ a b Yashada Sunuwar 2018.
  10. ^ Grading Rationale, p. 1.
  11. ^ a b Grading Rationale, p. 3.
  12. ^ Rudi Khola - A Small Hydropower Project.
  13. ^ Monthly Progress Report January, 2019, p. 1.
  14. ^ Salient Features of Rudi Khola- A, p. 3.
  15. ^ Grading Rationale, p. 5.
  16. ^ "Operating Projects- Hydro (Above 1MW)".
  17. ^ Annual Report 2019/2046. Nepal Electricity Authority.

Sources edit