Simbolon Samosir Geothermal Power Plant is an 110MW geothermal power project. It is planned in North Sumatra, Indonesia. According to GlobalData, who tracks and profiles over 170,000 power plants worldwide, the project is currently at the permitting stage. It will be developed in a single phase. The project construction is likely to commence in 2024 and is expected to enter into commercial operation in 2025. Buy the profile here.

Smarter leaders trust GlobalData

Report-cover

Data Insights Simbolon Samosir Geothermal Power Plant

Buy the Report

Data Insights

The gold standard of business intelligence.

Find out more

Description

The project is being developed and currently owned by PT Samosir Geothermal Power.

Simbolon Samosir Geothermal Power Plant will run at a temperature of 240 Degree Celsius.

The geothermal power project consists of 2 turbines, each with 55MW nameplate capacity.

Development status

The project construction is expected to commence from 2024. Subsequent to that it will enter into commercial operation by 2025.

Power purchase agreement

The power generated from the project will be sold to PT PLN (Persero) under a power purchase agreement.

For more details on Simbolon Samosir Geothermal Power Plant, buy the profile here.

About PT Samosir Geothermal Power

KS ORKA and PT Optima Nusantara agreed to establish the special purpose entity PT Samosir Geothermal Power (project company) to jointly develop the Simbolon-Samosir geothermal project.

Data Insights

From

The gold standard of business intelligence.

Blending expert knowledge with cutting-edge technology, GlobalData’s unrivalled proprietary data will enable you to decode what’s happening in your market. You can make better informed decisions and gain a future-proof advantage over your competitors.

GlobalData

GlobalData, the leading provider of industry intelligence, provided the underlying research used to produce this article.

This information is drawn from GlobalData’s Power Intelligence Center, which provides detailed profiles of over 170,000 active, planned and under construction power plants worldwide from announcement through to operation across all technologies and countries worldwide.