List of power stations in South Sudan

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This article lists all power stations in South Sudan.

Hydroelectric power stations[edit]

Hydroelectric station Community Coordinates Type Capacity Year completed Name of reservoir River
Juba Power Station[1] Juba, Central Equatoria State Run of river 5.0 MW 2006 River Nile
Kapoeta Power Station[2] Kapoeta, Eastern Equatoria State Run of river 0.9 MW 2011 Narus River
Maridi Power Station[3] Maridi, Western Equatoria State Run of river 0.9 MW 2011[4] River Maridi
Yei Power Station[5] Yei, Central Equatoria State Run of river 1.2 MW 2008 River Yei

Proposed hydroelectric power stations[edit]

Hydroelectric station Community Coordinates Type Capacity Year completed Name of reservoir River
Fula-Nimule Power Station[6] Nimule, Eastern Equatoria State Run of river 42.0 MW TBD River Nile

Thermal power stations[edit]

Thermal power station Fuel type No of units Capacity per unit (in MW) Total Capacity (in MW)[7] Remarks
Bor Power Station[8] Diesel 2 1 2 Under construction
Rumbek Power Station[9] Diesel 2 1 2 Under construction
Wau Power Station Diesel 2 1 2 Operational
Yambio Power Station Diesel 2 1 2 Under construction
Juba (Wärtsilä) Diesel 8 1.5 12 Operational
Juba (Cummins) Diesel 5 1 5 Not operational
Malakal Diesel 6 0.8 4.8 Operational
Juba Thermal Power Station Diesel 3 11 33 (Under Expansion to 100) Operational

Solar[edit]

Solar power station Community Coordinates Fuel type Capacity (megawatts) Year completed Owner Notes
Juba Solar Power Station[10] Juba 04°52′10″N 31°29′23″E / 4.86944°N 31.48972°E / 4.86944; 31.48972 (Juba Solar Power Station) Solar 20 2023 (Expected)[11] Juba Solar Consortium

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Juba Power Station Was Largest In South Sudan As of February 2007
  2. ^ Kapoeta Power Station Built With Assistance From USAID
  3. ^ Maridi Power Station Built With Assistance From USAID
  4. ^ Maridi Power Station Commissioned In February 2011
  5. ^ Yei Power Station Built With Assistance From USAID
  6. ^ Moi, Peter (24 June 2015). "South Sudan to Import Power from Uganda". Newnationsouthsudan.com.
  7. ^ "List of Electric Power Plant Capacity in South Sudan". Archived from the original on 13 September 2013.
  8. ^ Bor Power Station Donated By Government of Egypt
  9. ^ Rumbek Power Station Commissioned In February 2011
  10. ^ Inès Magoum (2 December 2020). "South Sudan: Asunim and I-kWh join the Juba solar project (20 MWp)". Afrik21.arica. Paris, France. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  11. ^ Carmen (9 February 2022). "Juba Solar PV Park, South Sudan". Power-Technology. New York City. Retrieved 2 June 2022.

External links[edit]