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Jordan Energy Situation

From energypedia
Revision as of 16:44, 20 April 2011 by ***** (***** | *****)

Overview

Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
 
 

Capital

Amman (31°57′N 35°56′E)

Official language(s)

Arabic

Government

Constitutional monarch

King of Jordan

Abdullah II

Prime Minister

Marouf al-Bakhit

Total area

92,300 km2

Population

6,407,085 (2010 estimate)

GDP (nominal)

$99.129 billion

GDP Per capita

$4,435

Currency

Jordanian dinar (JOD)

Time zone

UTC+01

Calling code

+962

Energy Market

Overview Energy Market

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The Electricity Grid

Level of development of Jordan’s transmission network; 2000, 2005; km
Power line ratings
2000
2005
                                  km
400 kV
809
871
230 kV
17
17
132 kV
2200
2512
66 kV
17
17

The Jordanian national interconnected grid transmits electricity from the power stations to the distribution substations and transformer substations in the various regions of the kingdom via 400-kV and 132-kV power lines. The star topography of the grid has a clearly identifiable north-south axis, along which the only 400-kV power line runs, from Aqaba in the south via Amman and up to the Syrian border. The only area in which the grid has a ring-shaped configuration is around the capital city.

In the north, the power grid is connected to the Syrian grid by means of a 230-kV and a 400-kV power line. In the south, there is a 400-kV connection to the Egyptian grid. The interconnected grid feeds the local distribution systems via which almost the entire population of Jordan receives its electricity. The overall length of the installed high voltage power lines (132 kV and 400 kV) is around 3,400 km.

The following table shows the level of expansion of Jordan’s transmission network in 2000 and 2005.

Table 6 lists the power losses that occur during the generation of power for the Jordanian interconnected grid, during transmission throughout the country and during distribution to the electricity customers (excluding self-generators).

Installed Capacity


Source: EEHC 2008

Electricity Generation


Source: EEHC 2008

Renewable Energies

I).

Electricity Prices

 above.

Rural Electrification

U

Market potential for renewable energies

Wind Energy

med.

Framework Conditions for Wind Energy

ate actors.

Licensing Procedures

ty.

Business Climate

sector.

Solar Energy

Solar ene

Biogas

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Hydro Power

cted.

Other renewable Sources

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Political Framework Conditions in the Energy Sector

Egypt

Liberalisation

Article 7 o

Important Laws and regulations

The mo

Framework Conditions for Renewable Energies

Strategy and objectives for renewable energies

Egypt’s 

Legal conditions and support Schemes for renewable Energies

To im

Clean Development Mechanism

Egypt’s

Institutional Set-up in the energy sector

Egyptian Ministry of Electricity and Energy

The first Mi

Regulatory authority EEUCPRA

The Egyptian

New and Renewable Energy Authority (NREA)

The Ministr

Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA)

The EEAA w

Egyptian Electricity Holding Company (EEHC)

The government-o

Egyptian Wind Energy Association (EGWEA)

The EGWEA is

International donor activities

Egypt is one of t

Existing Projects

Wind Energy

Egypt has p

Publications

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External links

References