By Dalga Khatinoglu
Head of Persian News Service of Trend Agency
Alamdar Babayi, the director for major repairs at South Pars Gas
Complex Company, announced on July 6 that the fifth refinery of South
Pars gas field, with capacity to produce 57 million cubic meters of gas
per day, is under repair.
With five refineries, Iran produces 240 million cubic meters of per day from the South Pars gas field.
It is while the oil ministry's latest report suggests that in the
past two weeks the liquid fuel consumption of the country's power plants
has been doubled.
According to SHANA News Agency, some 2.02 billion liters of liquid
fuel (diesel oil and mazut) was consumed in Iran in the first two weeks
of summer (145 million liters per day). The figure was around 1.044
million liters (some 150 million liters per day) in the last week of
spring.
Iran's total liquid fuel output (including gasoline, diesel oil,
mazut, and kerosene) is a little more than 265 million liters per day.
In another words, the country's power plants consumed over 55 percent of
the total liquid fuels produced in the country, which is twice the
consumption rate of previous year in average.
According to the oil ministry, Iran's power plants averagely consumed
28 billion liters (less than 77 million liters per day) of liquid fuel
in the previous year.
Iranian household's consumption accounts for over 80 percent of the
country's total gas consumption in winter. So the government limits
transferring gas to power plants, and instead delivers liquid fuel to
the plants. But in summer the ministry has enough gas to meet the power
plants' demands.
For example, in January, Iranian households' gas consumption was four
times more than the summer, and some 3.6 billion liters of liquid fuel
(some 120 million liters per day) were consumed by power plants.
Iran's household gas consumption was around 450-480 million cubic
meters per day in the cold months of previous year, while the figure was
around 120-130 million cubic meters in summer.
The figure of liquid gas being transferred to the power plants this
summer is nearly twice the previous year and even more that winter.
The reason behind the fact is still unknown. However, Seyyed Zaman
Hosseini, the managing director of Tehran Regional Electric Company,
told Fars News Agency on July 6 that due a problem the flow of gas to
the country's power plants have been limited, so in order to avoid any
blackout the oil ministry was forced to use the liquid gas that was
stored for winter.
He didn't give any information about the cause of the problem.
Iran's electricity consumption has also been on the rise this summer.
According to the energy ministry, the consumption peak on July 1 was
around 2,100 megawatt more than previous year, standing at 44,174
megawatt.
However, the rise in electricity consumption could have been
compensated with gas; and a 100-percent rise in liquid fuel consumption
in power plants to compensate for 5 percent increase in electricity
consumption is rather strange.
Iran has 75 power plants with the liquid gas reserves enough for 45
days. The power plants have the capacity to receive over 200 million
cubic meters of gas per day, but due to gas shortage the country meets
around 40 percent of the power plants' needs with liquid fuel during
last year.
A quick look at Iranian power plant's gas consumption rate in the
first 14 days of previous summer shows that the country faced no problem
in providing enough gas back then.
Iran's total gas consumption in February two years ago was a little
over 505 million cubic meters per day. Power plants and industrial
units' consumption accounted for 141 million cubic meters of the
mentioned amount, while the household's consumption was a little over
364 million cubic meters. It is while over 240 million cubic meters of
gas were delivered to power plants and industrial units in July same
year.
Iran's gross natural gas output currently stands at 570 million cubic meters per day.