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The following page lists the power stations in Sri Lanka that are connected to the central power grid. Most hydroelectric and thermal/fossil-fuel based power stations in the country are owned and/or operated by the Government or the state-run Ceylon Electricity Board, while the renewable energy sector consists of mostly of privately-run plants operating with a 10–20 year Power Purchase Agreement. As of 2014, the country had a total combined installed generation capacity of , of which 2,115MW (53.8%) was from thermal, 1,665MW (42.3%) from hydroelectricity, and the remaining 152MW (3.9%) from other renewable sources such as small hydro, wind, and solar. These generation sources produced a total of of electricity during that year, of which 7,508GWh (60.8%), 4,534GWh (36.7%), and 315GWh (2.5%) was from thermal, hydro, and other renewables, respectively.〔 == Fossil-fuel == As of 2015, of the total thermal installed capacity was from state-owned fossil-fuel power stations; 900MW from Lakvijaya, 380MW from the state-owned portion of Kelanitissa, 160MW from Sapugaskanda, and 24MW from Uthuru Janani. An additional 500MW will be added to the total state-owned capacity after the completion of the Sampur Power Station in late 2017, which is being built with provisions to add a further 500MW in the future. The remaining 641MW of the installed thermal capacity were from six privately-owned power stations.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.ceb.lk/knowledge-center/#tab-1442494805846-7-1 )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://powermin.gov.lk/english/?page_id=1507 )〕 In an attempt to lower the current consumer tariff for electricity, the government has decided not renew the power purchase agreements of privately owned thermal power stations when their licences expire, as it has done with the six now-decommissioned private power producers listed below. The government will utilize the new Sampur plant combined with new renewable sources to accommodate the lost private-sector capacity, with plans to introduce nuclear power after 2030. The Ministry of Power and Renewable Energy also made a statement that no more coal-fired power stations will be commissioned after Sampur, making it and Lakvijaya the only two coal power stations in the country. Any future thermal power stations will also be natural gas-run, to reduce the nation's carbon footprint. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「List of power stations in Sri Lanka」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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