Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Bosnia – Wind – Cantonal government in Herzegovina gives approval for 60-MW wind park “Mučavača”



On the morning of 9 February 2011, the online news services in Bosnia and Herzegovina began spreading a report that the government of the federation’s Herceg-Bosna Canton had granted approval for the construction of the wind park “Mučavača” (often misspelled Mučevača, Mučevač, or Mučovača) east of Livno in the Croatian area of western Herzegovina.  The news, however, had actually appeared more than ten days earlier.

On 27 January, the 114th session of the government of Herceg-Bosna Canton in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina approved the granting of a concession to the firm Balkan Energy Wind d.o.o. for the construction of the wind park “Mučavača” in the town of Livno.

Nevertheless, very little information is available about this project or its promoters. 

The first public mention of this project seems to have come on 17 June 2010, when the 101st session of the government of Herceg-Bosna Canton adopted the opinion of the canton’s Ministry of Economy regarding a request by the firm Balkan Energy Wind for a concession for the construction of the wind park “Mučavača” within the Municipality of Livno.

On 19 October 2010 the Federation’s Federal Ministry for Environment and Tourism received an application for an environmental permit for the construction of a wind park named “Mučavača” at Livno, consisting of 30 turbines of 2 MW capacity each. 

In the meantime, the Herceg-Bosna Canton’s Ministry of Economy requested the opinion or consent of the municipal council and mayor of Livno regarding the proposed Mučavača wind park, as required by cantonal law.  Because the municipal council and mayor of Livno did not reply to this request within 30 days, on 1 December 2010 the 110th session of the government of Herceg-Bosna Canton adopted the conclusion that the consent of the municipality could be considered as given.  (Since the offices of the Canton on Stjepana II Kotromanića Street in Livno are less than one kilometer from the offices of the municipality of Livno on Trg Branitelja in Livno (see town map), and the closest wind turbines, at just 3 km from the town center, will be visible from the southern parts of the town itself, this silence seems rather curious.)

Five days later, on 6 December 2010 the 111th session of the cantonal government approved the wind study, feasibility study, and preliminary environmental assessment submitted by Balkan Energy Wind for the purpose of obtaining a concussion for constructing the Mučavača wind park, and also (apparently) decided that the awarding of the concession would be carried out using a tendering procedure.

On 11 January 2011 the Federal Ministry for Environment and Tourism published on its website a notice announcing Balkan Energy Wind’s request for an environmental permit, inviting public inspection of the application documents at the Ministry’s offices, and initiating a 15-day period for public comments.  Attached to the notice was a non-technical summary of the project’s permit application.  The full permit application was not published online, so at present this non-technical summary appears to be the only source available online for information about the project and its developer.  From the summary we learn the following:

Balkan Energy Wind d.o.o., of Livno, submitted in January 2009 a request to the Municipality of Livno for the reserving of land in planning documents and for the right to use land for the possibility of obtaining a concession for constructing a wind park named “Mučavača” within the Municipality of Livno.

Using its own resources, Balkan Energy Wind carried out wind measurements at “Mučavača” (from 1 August 2009 through 1 February 2010, i.e., for six months), had a feasibility study carried out, and submitted to the Municipality of Livno an application for an environmental permit, outlining all the potential environmental impacts of the project.

Location: approximately 2.9 km east of the center of the town of Livno, and approximately 1.2 km northwest of the village of Jagodići.  [The wind park will lie between “Mučavača”, a small hill of 1,231 m elevation near the edge of a rugged, barren plateau in Herzegovina about 1,200 m in height,  and “Golubnjača”, a hill of 1,153 m elevation situated about 6 km to the southeast on the edge of the same plateau.  (The phrase “rugged, barren plateau in Herzegovina” is perhaps a tautology, since almost all plateaus in Herzegovina are rugged and barren.)  The hill “Mučavača” is located at 43° 49' 53 N, 17° 2' 47 E, about 20 km north of the area within the municipality of Tomislavgrad where EP HZHB is planning to build its Mesihovina Wind Park.]  The surface area of the site on which the wind park will be constructed is approximately 6.671 km2.

Turbines: The environmental permit was issued for 30 Enercon E-82 turbines of 2 MW each, for a total installed capacity of 60 MW.  The rotor diameter is 82 m, and the height of the hub will be between 78 and 138 m.

On 25 March 2009, Balkan Energy Wind received a building permit from the Municipality of Livno for the erection of a 50-meter mast for wind measurement at Kruzi within the Municipality of Livno.  The site for the wind mast was chosen by the consulting firm Vran-Dukić d.o.o. of Tomislavgrad, which also carried out the wind measurements.

In February 2010, the firm Vran-Dukić prepared a financial feasibility study and preliminary environmental impact assessment for the proposed project.

A full environmental impact assessment was prepared by the university-affiliated firm Institut za hidrotehniku Građevinskog fakulteta u Sarajevu d.d. of Sarajevo, and this was used as the basis for an application for an environmental permit submitted to the Federal Ministry for Environment and Tourism.

Firm developing the project:
Balkan Energy Wind d.o.o.
Splitska bb
80 101 Livno
Tel: 034 20 44 60
Fax: 034 20 84 18
JMBP: 4281197470007
Representative: Ms. Zdenka Lijović
(In fact the database of the Chamber of Commerce of Bosnia and Herzegovina does not contain any information on this firm, the only firm in Livno with a name containing “Balka*” being the Livno branch of the firm Balkan Broker Group d.o.o. of Tuzla.  This firm is also located on Splitska Street, but has a different JMBP identification number: 4209802650028.)

Six days after the publication of the notice by the Federal Ministry for Environment and Tourism, on 17 January 2011 the 113th session of the government of Herceg-Bosna Canton adopted a resolution to accept the report of the canton’s Concessions Commission regarding 1) the tendering process to be used [or already used] for a concession for the construction of a wind park at Mučavača in Livno by means of a call for bids; and 2) approval of the negotiation process for granting a concession and the preparation of a concession agreement.  The government also adopted a resolution regarding approval of the proposed concession agreement, as well as the selection and authority of the ministry which will sign the concession agreement with Balkan Energy Wind for the wind park at Mučavača.

Finally, as we have seen, ten days later on 27 January 2011 the 114th session of the government of Herceg-Bosna Canton adopted a resolution regarding approval of the proposed agreement as well as the selection and authority of the canton’s Ministry of Economy to approve the granting of a concession with Balkan Energy Wind for the construction of a wind park at Mučavača.

Many questions remain, as the project appears to be only at a very preliminary stage.  For instance, the Independent System Operator in Bosnia and Herzegovina (Nezavisni operator sistema u Bosni i Hercegovini – NOS BiH) tracks the status of known wind park projects in Bosnia and Herzegovina so as to be able to forecast future power availability.  In its latest power forecast, published in July 2010, even though no actual construction has begun on any wind park in Bosnia and Herzegovina the report nevertheless summarizing the permitting status of no less than forty-seven (47) proposed wind park projects, yet the report contains no mention at all of Balkan Wind Energy or a wind park at Mučavača.

In addition, the “call for bids”, tendering process, and contract signing seem to have been accomplished by the government of Herceg-Bosna Canton with astonishing speed, and nothing has been published about what payments the developers will be required to make to the canton for this wind park, a facility which will be visible for decades to come to anyone approaching the capital of the canton, Livno.


Topographic maps:

Mučavača


Mesihovina


Links:

Održana 101. sjednica Vlade Hercegbosanske županije (18 Lipanj 2010 )

Zaprimljeni zahtjevi – nova postrojenja u 2010. godini za izdavanje okolinske dozvole/okolišnog dopuštenja

Javni uvid - Vjetropark MUČOVAČA, ENERGY WIND d.o.o. LIVNO

Netehnički rezime VE Mučavača

Održana 110. sjednica Vlade Hercegbosanske županije

Održana 111. sjednica Vlade Hercegbosanske županije

Održana 113. sjednica Vlade Hercegbosanske županije

Održana 114. sjednica Vlade Hercegbosanske županije



Sunday, February 6, 2011

Montenegro – 17 firms submit expressions of interest for small hydroelectric plants on 8 watercourses


On Tuesday, 1 February 2011, Montenegro’s Ministry of Economy published a list of the companies that had met the deadline of 31 January 2011 for sending expressions of interest in concessions for the construction of small hydroelectric plants on eight watercourses in Montenegro.  The call for expressions of interest was contained in the “Letter of Intent for the Issuing of Concessions for the Use of Watercourses for the Construction of Small Hydroelectric Plants” (Pismo namjere za davanje koncesija za korišćenje vodotoka za izgradnju malih hidroelektrana) issued by the Ministry of Economy on 24 December 2010.

The eight waterways are the following:


Watercourse (Basin)
Town
Predicted annual electricity production (GWh/yr)
Bukovica (Komarnica)
Šavnik
14.2
Bijela (Komarnica)
Šavnik
5.4
Bukovica (Tara)
Kolašin
0.9
Bistrica (Ljuboviđa)
Bijelo Polje
7.4
Kraštica (Lim)
Andrijevica
3.1
Zlorečica with Peročica (Lim)
Andrijevica
11.4
Velička River (Lim)
Plav
1.5
Đurička River with its tributaries (Lim)
Plav
6.0


(Maps and hydrologic analyses of the individual watercourses can be found at Vodotoci za izgradnju malih hidroelektrana.  Note that the figures given above are for annual production, not installed capacity.  For example, 14.2 GWh/year would be the production of a hydroelectric plant of 1.62 MW installed capacity operating at full capacity year round: 14,200 MWhr/yr ÷ 8760 hr/yr = 1.62 MW.)

The firms submitting expressions of interest prior to the deadline were the following:


As Identified by Ministry
Actual Identity
Legal Headquarters
Ownership
Notes
eXtrem inženjering d.o.o., Bosna i Hercegovina
Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Mediterranean Co. d.o.o., Crna Gora
Mediterranean Co. d.o.o.
Budva, Montenegro
100% owned by Slavko Radunović

Naturwind d.o.o., Crna Gora
Naturwind d.o.o.
Ulcinj, Montenegro
owned and operated by Fadil Dodić

aCssignia, Španija
Madrid, Spain


Temko d.o.o., Crna Gora
Temko d.o.o.
Nikšić, Montenegro
owned by Mojaš & Tomaš Ćorović

Renewable Energy Ventures d.o.o., Srbija
Renewable Energy Ventures d.o.o. (REV d.o.o.)
Belgrade, Serbia
100% owned by Renewable Energy Ventures (BVI) Ltd, British Virgin Islands, and ultimately by Reservoir Capital Corp., Vancouver, Canada
Reservoir Capital Corp. is presently developing a 58.4 MW hydroelectric project at Brodarevo in Serbia
TM Business Consulting and Solutions, Austrija
Leitzersdorf, Austria


IFWR MBH, Njemačka
unknown
Germany


D’Appolonia, Italija
Genoa, Italia


Ekoenergo inženjering, Srbija
Belgrade, Serbia
owned by Zoran Mojić (65%) and Rade Đorđević (35%)

Korona d.d., Slovenija
Ljubljana, Slovenia

MacHydro Project Skoplje, Makedonija – Češka
MacHydro Project Co. AD (Макхидро Проект Ко АД Скопје)
Skopje, Macedonia
a subsidiary of Hydropol Project & Management, a.s., Prague, Czech Republic

ECG d.o.o., Crna Gora – Austrija
ECG-Male Hidroelektrane d.o.o.
Podgorica, Montenegro
a subsidiary of Energy Eastern Europe Hydro Power GmbH, Judenburg, Austria
NTE Montenegro d.o.o., Crna Gora – Norveška
NTE Montenegro d.o.o.
Podgorica, Montenegro
a joint venture of Nord-Trøndelag Elektrisitetsverk Holding AS, Steinkjer, Norway (51%) and Zetagradnja d.o.o., Podgorica (49%)

Balkan Energo Invest, Crna Gora
Balkan Energo Invest d.o.o.
Podgorica, Montenegro
100% owned by Victor Kolbanovskiy
registered as a company on 27 January 2011
Hidrowat, Crna Gora – Austrija
presumably Hidrowat d.o.o.
Podgorica, Montenegro
100% owned by Miloš Aleksić
registered as a company on 24 January 2011
Mn energy plus, Crna Gora – Austrija
presumably MN Energy Plus d.o.o.
Podgorica, Montenegro
100% owned by Dragan Čarapić
registered as a company on 18 January 2011


Because the final three firms listed above carried out their commercial registration less than two weeks before the deadline for submission of expressions of interest, it is quite possible that they were formed specifically for this concession competition.

I have sent an e-mail to the relevant office of the Ministry of Economy asking for further information on “aCssignia”, “IFWR MBH”, and the two 100% Montenegrin firms that they have indicated as “Montenegro/Austria” – Hidrowat and MN Energy Plus.  I will update this blog entry if I receive any additional information from them or from other sources.