Feb 13, 2017- With the onset of 
the dry season, power generation from the 70MW Middle Marshyangdi 
Hydropower Project has dipped by around 60 percent.
The hydropower plant is now generating 
only around 30MW of electricity on an average due to the significant 
drop in water level in the river basin.
The electricity generation started to 
dip from the month of November with the drop in the water level in the 
river. At the end of December, the project was generating 40 MW of 
electricity which further dipped down by the end of January.
The peaking run of the river project is 
generating 30MW of electricity at the peak hour in the mornings and 
evenings, whereas it drops down to meagre 20MW for the rest of the day.
“We are generating electricity as 
directed by the load dispatch centre of Nepal Electricity Authority 
(NEA),” said Pashupati Raj Gautam, chief of the Middle Marshyangdi 
Project. “The maximum we can generate is 30MW for a period of three 
hours in the morning and as many hours in the evening.”
“The project can generate more 
electricity during the peak hours by storing water during the day and 
night time,” Gautam explained.
The power plant can generate as much as 
72MW of electricity during the wet season and same quantum of 
electricity is generated for the period of 5 to 6 months, according to 
the project. Gautam estimates the electricity generation to peak after 
the first week of June.
The project has initiated the 
maintenance works after the hydropower plant started to operate under 
capacity. “Currently, we are using a single turbine and have started the
 maintenance of other,” said Gautam.
Despite a massive decline in the 
electricity generation from the Middle Marshyandi plant, the NEA has 
assured that Kathmandu Valley would remain free of power cuts in 
February.
The country’s peak electricity demand 
hovers around 1,200MW but there is the domestic output of around 450MW. 
To bridge the gap, Nepal is currently importing around 365MW of 
electricity from India through eight points.
source: http://www.nepalenergyforum.com

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