Kohala Hydropower Project | |
Name Official: | Kohala Hydropower Project |
Coordinates: | 34.0992°N 73.4964°W |
Dam Crosses: | Jhelum River |
Location: | Azad Kashmir |
Dam Type: | Gravity, roller-compacted concrete |
Dam Height: | 57m (187feet) |
Dam Length: | 212m (696feet) |
Construction Began: | n |
Opening: | December 2025 (est.) [1] |
Status: | Approved for construction[2] |
Owner: | China Three Gorges Corporation (CTG) |
Res Capacity Total: | 490000000NaN0 |
Res Capacity Active: | 87300000NaN0 |
Res Surface: | 0.780NaN0 |
Res Max Length: | 6.40NaN0 |
Plant Name: | Kohala Hydropower Project |
Plant Coordinates: | 34.0704°N 73.5005°W |
Plant Type: | R |
Plant Hydraulic Head: | 290m (950feet) |
Plant Turbines: | 4 x 281 MW Francis-type[3] |
Plant Capacity: | 1124 MW |
Plant Annual Gen: | 4800 GWh |
Cost: | $2.4 Billion |
The Kohala Hydropower Project is a proposed run-of-the-river, high head project of 316 meters that will be located near Kohala, in Azad Kashmir. In 2020 the project's agreement was finalised[4] later it was formally signed in a ceremony attended by the Pakistani Prime Minister Imran khan, and Chinese ambassador. [5]
The diversion dam site is on Jhelum River near Sarran Village 40 km upstream from Muzaffarabad and a 17.2 km long tunnel connects to the powerhouse which is located at Barsala 7 km upstream from Kohala Bridge.[6] [7]
China Three Gorges Corporation (CTGC), the state-owned hydropower developer, won the right to develop a hydroelectric dam in Pakistan on January 7, 2015. The Kohala Hydropower Project will be CTGC's largest investment in Pakistan.[8]
In December 2018 the people of Muzaffarabad held protests against Kohala dam design due to its planned water diversion via tunnel which will bypass the Muzaffarabad city. [9]
The dam's feasibility study and detailed engineering designs were performed by SMEC.[10] The Kohala hydroelectric scheme will have a gravity, roller-concrete compacted dam on the upper branch of the Jhelum, 40 km from Muzaffarabad. The powerhouse, on the lower branch of the Jhelum near Barasala, will house four 281-MW Pelton turbines.
CWE is required to construct the project on a build, own, operate and transfer basis. In 2014, local published reports said the average tariff for the first 12 years was set at 8.9 cents per unit and during the following 18 years would be 5.1 cents per unit. The average tariff for the 30-year life of the project is 7.9 cents per unit. The tariff ensures 17 per cent return on equity on internal rate of return basis.
The project is expected to earn carbon credit from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change for clean energy development under the Kyoto protocol.