Singapore’s Keppel has reached a final investment decision (FID) to develop a hydrogen-ready power plant and has awarded an engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract to Mitsubishi Power Asia Pacific and Jurong Engineering.
On 30 August, Keppel Infrastructure informed that, through its wholly-owned subsidiary Keppel Energy, it reached FID to develop a 600-megawatt advanced combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power plant. It also awarded an EPC contract to a consortium comprising Mitsubishi Power Asia Pacific and Jurong Engineering for the construction of the plant.
The Keppel Sakra Cogen Plant will be the first hydrogen-ready power plant in Singapore. It will be built in the Sakra sector of Jurong Island.
The Keppel Sakra Cogen Plant will be owned by Keppel Sakra Cogen (KSC), presently a wholly-owned indirect subsidiary of Keppel Infrastructure. It is intended that Keppel Asia Infrastructure Fund (KAIF) and Keppel Energy will hold 70 per cent and 30 per cent equity interests in KSC respectively.
In addition, KSC and Keppel Energy will enter into a turnkey contract for the development of the plant. The total investment for the Keppel Sakra Cogen Plant is expected to be around S$750 million.
Running initially on natural gas as primary fuel, the Keppel Sakra Cogen Plant is also designed to operate on fuels with 30 per cent hydrogen content and has the capability of shifting to run entirely on hydrogen.
Expected to be completed in the first half of 2026, the Keppel Sakra Cogen Plant will be the most energy efficient power plant in Singapore, according to the project participants. This advanced CCGT will be the most efficient among the operating fleet in Singapore and will be able to save up to 220,000 tonnes per year of CO2 as compared to Singapore’s average operating efficiency for equivalent power generated.
A long-term service (LTS) contract for major maintenance of the turbine was also awarded to Mitsubishi Power Asia Pacific.
With the energy sector accounting for almost 40 per cent of Singapore’s carbon emissions, decarbonising electricity generation is at the core of the global climate change effort and one of the key features of Singapore’s Green Plan.
In addition to the EPC and LTS contracts, Keppel New Energy, a wholly owned subsidiary of Keppel Infrastructure, also signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, to carry out a feasibility study on the development of a 100 per cent ammonia-fuelled power plant on a selected site in Singapore.