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US sanctions stymie $1.3bn Vietnamese power plant

riscol

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US sanctions against Russia have prevented Power Machines, the Russian power engineering company building a $1.3bn power plant in southern Vietnam, from importing the equipment it needs to complete construction, Vietnamese media report.

Around 20,000 tons of equipment including two General Electric turbines that were ordered for the 1.2GW Long Phu 1 thermal power plant under construction in Soc Trang Province are frozen in the US, reports newspaper VN Express, citing a memorandum by Vietnam’s State Capital Management Committee (SCMC), which represents PetroVietnam (PVN), the owner of Long Phu 1.

Power Machines was subject to sanctions in January 2018 after it sold turbines to a power plant in the Crimea.

The SCMC’s report highlighted concerns over the preservation of the equipment during its storage. In June, Trinh Dinh Dung, Vietnam’s deputy prime minister, instructed PVN to coordinate with the Power Machines to ensure that equipment did not rust.

Work began on the project in 2015 and the first of its super-critical 600MW turbine was to have been installed in 2018. PVN has said that its cost is likely to rise to $1.7bn, of which 30% is being met from its own funds with the remainder to come from commercial loans.

The 115ha Long Phu 1 plant is part of the Long Phu Power Centre, which will ultimately contain three coal-fuelled stations with a total installed capacity of 4.4GW. It is one of the main projects envisaged by the government’s 2011-20 National Power Masterplan.

Long Phu 1 will use some 3 million tonnes of coal from Australia and Indonesia, which will be transported along the Hau River by 10,000 tonne barges. The generating process will be controlled by automation technology supplied by Finnish company Valmet.

Vietnam is planning to invest $150bn in its energy sector by 2030 in order to prevent a lack of power holding back the country’s rapid economic growth. This hit a nine-year high of 7% in the first nine months of the year, with industry and construction growing 9.4% and contributing 53% of the total.
 
US sanctions against Russia have prevented Power Machines, the Russian power engineering company building a $1.3bn power plant in southern Vietnam, from importing the equipment it needs to complete construction, Vietnamese media report.

Around 20,000 tons of equipment including two General Electric turbines that were ordered for the 1.2GW Long Phu 1 thermal power plant under construction in Soc Trang Province are frozen in the US, reports newspaper VN Express, citing a memorandum by Vietnam’s State Capital Management Committee (SCMC), which represents PetroVietnam (PVN), the owner of Long Phu 1.

Power Machines was subject to sanctions in January 2018 after it sold turbines to a power plant in the Crimea.

The SCMC’s report highlighted concerns over the preservation of the equipment during its storage. In June, Trinh Dinh Dung, Vietnam’s deputy prime minister, instructed PVN to coordinate with the Power Machines to ensure that equipment did not rust.

Work began on the project in 2015 and the first of its super-critical 600MW turbine was to have been installed in 2018. PVN has said that its cost is likely to rise to $1.7bn, of which 30% is being met from its own funds with the remainder to come from commercial loans.

The 115ha Long Phu 1 plant is part of the Long Phu Power Centre, which will ultimately contain three coal-fuelled stations with a total installed capacity of 4.4GW. It is one of the main projects envisaged by the government’s 2011-20 National Power Masterplan.

Long Phu 1 will use some 3 million tonnes of coal from Australia and Indonesia, which will be transported along the Hau River by 10,000 tonne barges. The generating process will be controlled by automation technology supplied by Finnish company Valmet.

Vietnam is planning to invest $150bn in its energy sector by 2030 in order to prevent a lack of power holding back the country’s rapid economic growth. This hit a nine-year high of 7% in the first nine months of the year, with industry and construction growing 9.4% and contributing 53% of the total.

China can provide. China has more than 100 super-critical steam generator, running at 600°C, 250 bar or so.

https://www.power-technology.com/projects/long-phu-1-thermal-power-plant-soc-trang-province/

Long Phu 1 thermal power plant make-up
The Long Phu 1 thermal power plant will be installed with two GE D850 steam turbines featuring pre-assembled sections to minimise the erection time.
It will also consist of two coal-fired boilers with a capacity of 600MW each. The boilers will operate at a supercritical pressure between 250bar and 285bar and temperature between 540°C and 560°C.
upload_2019-10-8_11-20-10.pnghttps://www.ge.com/content/dam/gepower-pgdp/global/en_US/documents/product/steam%20turbines/Fact%20Sheet/gea33037-steam-600-series-2017.pdf
 

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China can provide. China has more than 100 super-critical steam generator, running at 600°C, 250 bar or so.

https://www.power-technology.com/projects/long-phu-1-thermal-power-plant-soc-trang-province/

Long Phu 1 thermal power plant make-up
The Long Phu 1 thermal power plant will be installed with two GE D850 steam turbines featuring pre-assembled sections to minimise the erection time.
It will also consist of two coal-fired boilers with a capacity of 600MW each. The boilers will operate at a supercritical pressure between 250bar and 285bar and temperature between 540°C and 560°C.
View attachment 582951https://www.ge.com/content/dam/gepower-pgdp/global/en_US/documents/product/steam%20turbines/Fact%20Sheet/gea33037-steam-600-series-2017.pdf

Sino-Vietnamese ties need to improve tbh
 
China is now dominating the world's steam turbine market. Many coal-fired power plants in North Vietnam are using Chinese turbines.

Hope the project can switch to use Chinese equipment.
 
The problem is not only because of those turbines but the Russian entity itself, they simply could not use the $.
So the Russian firm is not only unable to buy those turbines regardless of origin, but the firm can not sell the project as well.
If China really, really want to empower Russia, you guys should consider declaring the Russian Ruble a reserve currency. After that, the firm can use the RUB to do the buying in China.
Come on, the Rus has a huge nuclear bomb arsenal, and you will get a long-lasting ally
 
The problem is not only because of those turbines but the Russian entity itself, they simply could not use the $.
So the Russian firm is not only unable to buy those turbines regardless of origin, but the firm can not sell the project as well.
If China really, really want to empower Russia, you guys should consider declaring the Russian Ruble a reserve currency. After that, the firm can use the RUB to do the buying in China.
Come on, the Rus has a huge nuclear bomb arsenal, and you will get a long-lasting ally

How to reserve Russian Ruble? Russian has surplus in trade, where did you get the Ruble?
Who will reserve Ruble if Ruble itself are not stable? If China reserve Ruble equivalent to 100 billion USD in 2013, when Ruble devalued to 1/3 of its value in 2016, will Russia pay China 66.6 billion USD?

It's naive thinking. You have no idea how the USD dominated the market. It has nothing to do with empowering or not, it's impossible.

upload_2019-10-9_13-30-49.png
 

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