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Gariuai Hydroelectric Plant

Coordinates: 8°34′37.25″S 126°25′34.50″E / 8.5770139°S 126.4262500°E / -8.5770139; 126.4262500
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Gariuai Hydroelectric Plant
Map
CountryEast Timor
LocationGariuai, Baucau District
Coordinates8°34′37.25″S 126°25′34.50″E / 8.5770139°S 126.4262500°E / -8.5770139; 126.4262500
StatusOperational
Construction began2006
Commission dateNovember 2008
Construction costUS$1.4 million
OwnerHydroTimor
Power generation
Units operational1 x 326 kW Pelton-type
Nameplate capacity326 kW
Annual net output1,452,000 kWh

The Gariuai Hydroelectric Plant is a run-of-the-river micro hydro power plant located in the town of Gariuai in Baucau District, East Timor. It failed within months of its first startup, due to a landslide which took out the penstock. A subsequent effort to restore the penstock a few years later was inadequate, and the penstock failed yet again. This time due to a lack of welding between the pipes. The dams, transmission lines, power station and much of the penstock remain intact but the site has not been used for power generation since the last failure in 2008. It was the only operational hydroelectric power station in the country, and has operated for just a few months total. In order to reduce dependency on diesel generators, sites were surveyed in 2004 in Baucau District for a hydroelectric power plant. Two streams, Builai and Wainalale were selected to provide water to the power station. Construction began in 2006. A 2 m (6.6 ft) tall embankment dam was constructed on Builai stream and a second 1 m (3.3 ft) high dam was built on Wainalale stream. Connecting the dams to the power station is 2,200 m (7,200 ft) of penstock. A single 326 kW Pelton turbine-generator is located in the power station which was commissioned in November 2008. The elevation between the reservoirs and the power station affords a hydraulic head of 196 m (643 ft). The project cost US$1.4 million which was funded by a grant from the Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate.[1][2]

References

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  1. ^ "Hydroelectric Power Plants in Asia-Pacific - other". IndustCards. Retrieved 20 April 2014.
  2. ^ Hoeiseth, Jan (October 2007). "Gariuai Mini HEP: The First Hydroelectric Plant in a New Country" (PDF). International Conference on Small Hydropower. Retrieved 20 April 2014.[permanent dead link]