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Wednesday
09 Oct 2024

WAPDA Appoints Design Engineer on Tarbela Extension, Pakistan

09 Oct 2024  by waterpowermagazine   
The project, with finance arranged by the World Bank, will extend the power generation facilities at Tarbela Dam on the Indus River. The extension is expected to add about 1000MW of electrical capacity to the national power system.

The dam, completed in 1974, was designed to store water from the River Indus for irrigation, flood control and the generation of hydroelectric power. There is currently an urgent need to add capacity to the system as the existing power generation capacity of Pakistan is not sufficient to meet the country’s rising demand for electricity.

The 148m high, 3000m long dam has two gated spillways with a combined discharge capacity of approximately 42,000m3/sec and five tunnels that provide irrigation releases and power generation. The dam forms a lake with a surface area of 230km2, a current gross storage capacity of 9.8Bm3 and a live storage capacity of 8.4Bm3 that can be released for irrigation and power generation during the low flow season. At the time of construction the dam tunnels 1, 2 and 3 were scheduled for power generation and tunnels 4 and 5 were designed exclusively for irrigation release.

Mott MacDonald has been appointed on the development of existing tunnel 4 which is to be used for power generation and is likely to add two units of 480MW each to the scheme. The company will carry out a detailed feasibility study to manage the implementation of the 4th extension so that it does not affect the irrigation release and sediment management. This will also include the modification of intake structure, the construction of a power house and the penstock between the outlet of the tunnel and the new powerhouse.

The project is due for completion around 2016 and has an estimated capital value of approximately US$500M.

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