The following page lists all power stations in Madagascar . The list is not complete. You can assist by adding relevant referenced content.
Hydroelectric station | Community | Coordinates | River | Type | Name of reservoir | Capacity (MW) | Year completed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Andekaleka Hydroelectric Power Station | Andekaleka | Vohitra River | Gravity | N/A | 91 MW | 1982, 2012 | |
Antelomita Hydroelectric Power Station | Anjeva Gara | Ikopa River | Gravity | N/A | 8.4 MW | 1930, 1952, 1953 | |
Farahantsana Hydroelectric Power Station | Mahitsy [1] | Ikopa River | Gravity | N/A | 28 MW | 2022 | |
Mandraka Power Station | Mandraka | Mandraka River | Gravity | Lake Mandraka | 24 MW | 1956 | |
Ankevirato Hydroelectric Power Station [2] | Tsarazaza | Rianamboa River | Gravity | 560 kW | 2023 | ||
Hydroelectric station | Community | Coordinates | Fuel type | Capacity | Year completed | Name of Owner | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Volobe Hydroelectric Power Station | Ambodilazana | water power | 120 MW | 2027 | Compagnie générale d’hydroélectricité de Volobe (CGHV) [3] |
Hydroelectric station | Community | Coordinates | River | Type | Name of reservoir | Capacity (MW) | Year completed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antetezambato Central [4] | Ambatofinandrahana District | ?? | Gravity | 140 MW [5] | (projected) | ||
Sahofika Hydroelectric Power Station [6] | Sahofika | Onive River | Gravity | Sahofika Reservoir | 205 MW [6] | 2024 (Expected) | |
Antananarivo Mixed Hydrosolar Power Station [7] | Antananarivo | Run of river | N/A | 35 MW [7] | 2026 (Expected) | ||
Ranomafana Hydroelectric Power Station | Ranomafana (95 km northwest of Antananarivo) [8] | -18°36’35.9S,47°1’13.27 E | Ikopa River [9] | Gravity | 2x32MW = 64 MW [10] | 202? (Expected) | |
Thermal power station | Community | Coordinates | Fuel type | Capacity | Year completed | Name of Owner | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mandroseza Power Plant | Antananarivo | Heavy fuel oil | 40 MW [11] | 202? | Symbion Power Mandroseza SA [12] | ||
Noor I Thermal Power Station [11] | Antananarivo | Heavy fuel oil | 48 MW [11] | 2018 | Jovena | ||
Noor II Thermal Power Station [11] | Antananarivo | Heavy fuel oil | 28 MW [11] | 2018 | Jovena | ||
Ambohimanambola Thermal Power Station | Ambohimanambola, [13] Antananarivo | Heavy fuel oil | 105 kw (7x15 kw) | end of 2023 | |||
Andaingo Thermal Power Station [14] | Andaingo | Biomass | 75 MW [14] | 2012 | CIRAD | ||
Solar power station | Community | Coordinates | Fuel type | Capacity | Year completed | Name of Owner | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ambatolampy Solar Power Station | Ambatolampy | Solar | 40 MW | April 2022 | Ambatolampy Solar Consortium | ||
Access Solar Power Station [15] | Antananarivo | Solar | 25 MW [15] | 2025 Expected | Access Power | ||
Centrale Solaire d’Andranotakatra | Belobaka, Mahajanga II [16] | 12 MW Solar central | Solar | 1.25 MW | 2022 | ||
Centrale Solaire d’Ambavahadinilakaka (Ihorombe) | Ambavahadinilakaka [17] | 470 kW Solar central | Solar | 470 kW | 2022 | Maherlla | |
Sambava Solar Power Station | Sambava [18] | Solar | 500 kW | March 2022 | Green Energy Solutions | ||
Solar power station | Community | Coordinates | Fuel type | Capacity | Year completed | Name of Owner | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kimony Solar Hybride Central | Bemanonga, Menabe | Solar + Thermal | 1.4 MW operative, 3MW projected [19] | 2022 (1.4MW operative) | Green Energy Solutions (GES) + Jirama | ||
Sava Hybride Power Station | Sambava, Antalaha, Vohemar [20] | Solar + Thermal | 8 MW Thermal + 5MW solar | Green Yellow | |||
Tanambao Verrerie Solar-hybride central | Tanambao Verrerie, Toamasina | Solar + Thermal | 18MW | 2021 | Jirama | ||
Toliara Centrale Energetique | Besinjaka (Tulear) [21] | Thermal + Solar | 9 MW Thermal + 2.9 MW solar | Filatex Energy | |||
Jirama is a state-owned electric utility and water services company in Madagascar.
The Antelomita Hydroelectric Power Station is located in the rural commune Anjeva Gara of the Analamanga Region, Madagascar. The hydroelectric power station comprises two parts, Antelomita I and II. Both are adjacent to one another on separate water falls along the Ikopa River. Each water fall is dammed and water is diverted to the power station; each of which contains three 1.4 megawatts (1,900 hp) generators. The first two were commissioned in 1930, the second two in 1952 and the final two in 1953. Both stages have an installed capacity of 8.4 megawatts (11,300 hp). They were built by a French firm but are now owned and operated by Jirama. The Tsiazompaniry and Mantasoa Dams upstream regulate water to the power station.
The Andekaleka Dam is a gravity dam on the Vohitra river near Andekaleka in eastern Madagascar. The primary purpose of the dam is hydroelectric power generation and it diverts water from the Vohitra east into a 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) headrace tunnel where it reaches a 91 megawatts (122,000 hp) underground power station. After water charges the turbine-generators, it travels down a 500 metres (1,600 ft) tailrace tunnel before it reenters the Vohitra River. The drop in elevation between the dam and power station affords a hydraulic head of 235 metres (771 ft). The dam and power station were funded by the World Bank at a cost of US$142.1 million. It was constructed between 1978 and 1982. The power station can house up to four generators. The first two were operational in 1982 and a third in 2012. Generator one and two host Vevey and Jeumont turbines while the third is made by HEC. They all use Francis reaction turbines which typically range from 10 to 700MW and with water head operating from 10 to 600 meters
Eranove is a French company active in the management of public services and in the production of electricity and drinking water in Africa. The company was formerly known as Finagestion.
The Magpie Generating Station is a 40.6 MW hydroelectric power generating station on the Magpie River in the Côte-Nord region of the province of Quebec, Canada. There was controversy during the planning phase since the dam flooded a stretch of rapids popular with advanced kayakers and rafters. However, the project was approved in 2005 and commissioned in 2007.
University of Antananarivo is the primary public university of Madagascar, located in the capital Antananarivo.
Sahofika Hydroelectric Power Station, also referred to as Sahofika Power Station, is a 205 megawatts (275,000 hp) hydroelectric power station under construction in Madagascar.
Atinkou Thermal Power Station, also Atinkou Efficient Power Station, is a 390 MW (520,000 hp) natural gas-fired thermal power plant under construction, in Taboth Village, near the town of Jacqueville, in the Ivory Coast.
Ayebo Biomass Power Station, also Biovéa Biomass Power Station, is a 46 MW (62,000 hp) biomass-fired thermal power plant under development in Ivory Coast. Biovéa Énergie SA, a special purpose vehicle company, has been awarded the concession contract to design, finance, construct, operate and maintain the power station. As raw material, the power station is designed to use palm oil waste.
The Gourou Banda Solar Power Station is a 50 MW (67,000 hp) solar power plant under construction in Niger. This renewable energy infrastructure project is under development by an independent power producer (IPP), under the build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT) model, with support from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, as part of the bank's "Scaling Solar" program. The solar farm, first conceived in 2018, as a 20 megawatts installation, was expanded to capacity of 50 megawatts in 2020.
The Ambatolampy Solar Power Station is a 40 MW solar power plant in Madagascar. As of April 2022, it was the first grid-connected, privately-funded solar power plant in the country. The power plant, which was first commissioned in 2018, underwent expansion from 20 MW to 40 MW, between 2021 and 2022. The off-taker of the energy generated at this renewable energy power plant is Jirama, the national electricity utility company.
The Volobe Power Station is a 120 megawatts (160,000 hp) hydroelectric power project under construction in Madagascar.
The Fekola Hybrid Power Station is a 115 MW (154,000 hp) power plant in Mali. The power system comprises 68 MW of thermal energy, 30 MW of solar power and 17.3 MW of lithium ion battery energy storage. The power station is owned by B2Gold Corporation, a Canadian mining company. Dornier Suntrace GmbH and BayWa, two German engineering consulting and construction companies were hired to advise, design, build, operate and maintain this power station. The off-taker is the Fekola Gold Mine, in southwestern Mali, that is off-grid and is owned by B2Gold.