Menengai I Geothermal Power Station


The Menengai I Geothermal Power Station is a geothermal power plant under construction in Kenya. The power station is owned and is being development by a consortium, which has formed a special vehicle company to own, design, build, finance, operate and maintain the power station. For descriptive purposes, we will call that SPV Orpower Twenty Two . Kenya Power and Lighting Company, the off-taker together with OP22, the independent power producer, plan to sign a 20-year power purchase agreement.

Location

The facility is located in the Menengai Crater, approximately, north of the city of Nakuru, where the county headquarters relocated. This is approximately, by road, northwest of Nairobi, the capital and largest city in Kenya. The coordinates of Menengai I Geothermal Power Station are: 0°11'53.0"S, 36°03'58.0"E.

Overview

Geothermal Development Company, a company wholly owned by the Kenyan government drilled geothermal wells in the Menengai Crater, whose total capacity can generate up to of electric energy. GDC will sell the steam to three independent power producers to build three geothermal power stations, each with capacity of. The power stations are:
1. Menengai I Geothermal Power Station: Owned by Orpower Twenty Two 2. Menengai II Geothermal Power Station: Owned by Globelq and 3. Menengai III Geothermal Power Station: Owned by Sosian Energy.
Menengai I Geothermal Power Station uses new geothermal technology jointly developed by Toshiba Corporation and Ormat Technologies Inc to harness more energy from the steam supplied to the plant by increasing efficiency.

Ownership

The power station is owned by a consortium, whose shareholding is illustrated in the table below: Vital Capital based in Switzerland became a shareholder in 2018, after Israel's Ormat Technologies divested from the project in 2018.
RankName of OwnerDomicilePercentage Ownership
1Vital CapitalSwitzerland50.00
2Symbion PowerUnited States25.00
3Civicon LimitedKenya25.00
Total100.00

Developments

In January 2023, Kenyan media reported that Orpower 22, the SPV company that owns and is developing this power station had secured
US$97 million in funding to build this power station. The source of funding was not disclosed.