Upper Mai-C Hydropower Station
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Upper Mai-C Hydropower Station () is a 6.1 MW run-of-the-river hydro-electric plant located in
Ilam District Ilam district () is one of Districts of Province No. 1, 14 districts of Koshi Province of eastern Nepal. It is a Geography of Nepal#The Hill Region, Hill districts of Nepal, district and covers . The 2011 Nepal census, 2011 census counted 290,25 ...
of Nepal. It is powered by water from the
Mai Khola The Mai Khola is a river in eastern Nepal, the headwater of the Kankai River. Its water is used for irrigation and also powers several hydroelectric plants. Location The Mai Khola is the main tributary of the Kankai. It is a perennial river that ...
.


Location and water supply

The Upper Mai-C Hydropower Station (UMCHEP) is located in the Mabu and Sulubung VDCs, in Sandakpur Gaunpalika, Ilam district. The flow from
Mai Khola The Mai Khola is a river in eastern Nepal, the headwater of the Kankai River. Its water is used for irrigation and also powers several hydroelectric plants. Location The Mai Khola is the main tributary of the Kankai. It is a perennial river that ...
is used to generate 6.1 MW electricity. Upper Mai C is a cascade project that uses the discharge from the tailrace of the
Upper Mai Hydropower Station Upper Mai Hydropower Station (Nepali: माथिल्लो माई जलविद्युत आयोजना) is a run-of-river hydro-electric plant located in Ilam District of Nepal. The Mai River flow is used to generate 25 MW electri ...
and additional discharge from streams that flow into the Mai river. The catchment area at the intake is . The design discharge is with a net head of at full discharge. The station one of ten operational or under construction power plants on the Mai Khola.


Technical

The headworks include a free overflow type diversion weir at an altitude of above sea level. The weir is high and long at the crest. Water flows through a bottom-type intake, sediment trap and flushing gallery through a settling basin with two chambers to a collection pond with normal water level above sea level. The waterways include a siphon crossing the Mai Khola, a headrace pipe with internal diameter of , a headrace tunnel with inverted D shape in cross section, to a surge shaft and rock trap at the powerhouse. The powerhouse is above sea level. Water is discharged through a tailrace. The powerhouse contains two horizontal
Francis turbine The Francis turbine is a type of water turbine. It is an inward-flow reaction turbine that combines radial and axial flow concepts. Francis turbines are the most common water turbine in use today, and can achieve over 95% efficiency. The pro ...
s with rated net head and discharge , each with 3050 kW rated output. There are two synchronous brushless 6.6 kV generators. A three-phase transformer steps up the voltage to 132 kV for transmission over a line that is combined with the Upper Mai Hydropower Station. Average electricity generated is 30 GWH. Electricity is carried to the Godak substation of the NEA along a 132 kv transmission line.


Commercial

The plant is owned and developed by Panchakanya Mai Hydropower, an
Independent Power Producer An independent power producer (IPP) or non-utility generator (NUG) is an entity that is not a public utility but owns facilities to generate electric power for sale to utilities and end users. NUGs may be privately held facilities, corporations ...
. The company was incorporated on 30 January 2003 as East Nepal Development Endeavour Private Limited. It was renamed to Mai Valley Hydropower Private Limited on 15 January 2009, then to Panchakanya Mai Hydropower Limited (PMHL) on 21 March 2016. The estimated cost of the project was NPR 1,050 million, of which about 64.36% was to be financed through bank loans and the remainder from equity. In January 2018 the company said it was offering 10% of its IPO shares for sale to local people of Sandakpur Rural Municipality and Ilam Municipality. However, as of April 2018 it was listed among hydropower companies operating after 2010 that had not issued local shares. The plant came into commercial operation on 24 July 2017 (2074-04-09BS). The generation licence will expire after 35 years 2105-03-20 BS, after which the plant will be handed over to the government. The power station is connected to the national grid and the electricity is sold to
Nepal Electricity Authority Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA), founded on 16 August 1985, is the parent generator, transmittor and retail distributor of electric power under the supervision of the government of Nepal. NEA has its own power plants. In addition it also buys ...
. The tariff is NPR 4.8 per kWhr in the wet season and NPR 8.4 per kWhr in the dry season.


See also

*
List of power stations in Nepal As of 4 March 2025, Nepal's total installed electricity capacity is 3421.956 megawatts (MW). This includes 3255.806 MW from hydropower, 106.74 MW from solar, 53.41 MW from thermal, and 6 MW from Co-generation.https://myrepublica.nagariknetwork.c ...


References


Sources

* * * * * * * * {{refend Hydroelectric power stations in Nepal Gravity dams Run-of-the-river power stations Dams in Nepal Irrigation in Nepal Buildings and structures in Ilam District