Ingenieur July-Sept 2016 Ingenieur July-Sept 2016 | Page 18

INGENIEUR Area Kuching & Kota Samarahan Division Sri Aman Division Rajang Catchment Rajang to Baram Baram Catchment Limbang Division Land Surface Area x 103 km2 9.0 Gross Surface Hydropower Potential % Total Total Potential Density TWh/a GWh/km2 3.3 0.37 1.7 10.7 50.8 24.2 22.2 8.3 3.6 104.9 6.5 60.8 12.9 0.34 2.06 0.27 2.74 1.55 1.9 54.6 3.4 31.7 6.7 Table 1: Hydropower Potential Distribution in Sarawak T he first preliminary survey on the estimation of the gross hydropower potential of Sarawak was undertaken in 1962 by the Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Authority of Australia (SMEHA) under the Colombo Plan aid programme. The study by SMEHA indicated that the gross hydropower potential is about 192 TWh per annum with 86% of the gross potential in Rajang and Baram catchments as shown in Table 1. The study was primarily limited to the assessment of hydropower potential available in the State and identification of potential sites which could be economically developed for power generation. In 1979, a more detailed and comprehensive study known as the Master Plan for Power System Development was initiated with the main emphasis on the hydropower potential. This Master Plan for Power System Development was completed in 1981 and was carried out jointly by a project team from the Sarawak Electricity Supply Corporation (SESCO), now a subsidiary company under Sarawak Energy Berhad (SEB), and a group of West German and Swiss consultants, known as the SAMA Consortium. The consortium was sponsored under a Technical Aid Programme extended to Malaysia by the German Technical Co-operation Ltd. (GTZ) on behalf of the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany. The general procedure adopted in the survey started with a desktop study of all available topographical, hydrological and geological information to identity potential dam sites. Each river was considered as a whole and the study went into necessary details to determine the power output and other relevant physical features of each site. The basic criterion was 6 16 VOL VOL67 55JULY-SEPTEMBER JUNE 2013 2016 to maximise the natural head from the source to the mouth of the river, taking into account the possibility of inter-basin water transfer. After the desktop study, a field reconnaissance of the identified dam sites was undertaken. Project layouts were adjusted to actual field information based on site topography and geology. Subsequently, water management computations were carried out and cost estimates prepared. A subsequent evaluation of the optimum development chains for all the river basins was carried out to determine the best means of harnessing their respective hydropower potentials. According to the ‘Master Plan for Power System Development’, a total of 52 projects could be developed with a potential of 20,000MW and energy output of some 87,000GWh/year based on a plant factor of 0.5. A summary of the results of the evaluation and optimisation exercises is given in Table 2. CURRENT DEVELOPMENT STATUS To date, three large hydropower projects, Batang Ai, Bakun and Murum have been completed in Sarawak. The Batang Ai plant (see Figure 1) began full operation in 1986 with an installed capacity of 108MW and annual energy of 620GWh per year; Bakun (see