Global tenders to be floated
for waste-to-energy plant planned at Brahmapuram
The spadework for the
waste-to-energy plant at Brahmapuram will be over within a fortnight.
KITCO, the public sector
consultant company that has been assigned the task of completing the paper
works for the project, will prepare the bid documents for the project within
the time-frame. Global tenders will have to be invited for setting up the plant
which can process bio-degradable waste as well as plastic, said Thomas Roy,
project engineer of the company.
The project will come up on
a 5-acre plot owned by the Kochi Corporation at Brahmapuram. Experts have
identified waste-to-energy as the suitable process for the plant, which will be
set up in Private-Public-Participation (PPP) mode. The company, which wins the
bid for the plant, can sell the power generated at the unit to the national
power grid or to the Kerala State Electricity Board. The power tariff and other
related details will have to be finalised, said Mr. Roy.
Incidentally, the
authorities had wasted more than a year discussing the suitable technology for
the Kochi plant.
The State government had
come forward to set up a new plant at the Brahmapuram site where the Kochi
Corporation had installed a plant using the funds from the Jawaharlal Nehru
National Urban Renewal Mission.
It is estimated that the
plant would require around 300 tonnes of waste a day for generating power. It
would be the responsibility of the local authorities to provide the required
raw material, the municipal waste, for the plant. Municipal waste from Kochi
Corporation area and neighbouring local bodies will be treated at the plant.
Plastic and bio-degradable waste need not be segregated and it can go together
into the plant. The presence of plastic in the refuse will help in augmenting
power production, he said.
Ash that is generated from
the process could be sold as there are many takers including fertiliser
manufacturers.
The fly ash generated from
the plant could be trapped to avoid any environmental pollution. It would be
the responsibility of the company, which wins the bid, to develop some tie-ups
with firms for the sale of ash generated from the plant.
Contractual conditions to
this effect will be incorporated in the bid document. If everything works well
as planned, the plant could be made operational in 15 months, he said.
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