According to Kyrgyzstan’s Ministry of Energy, the modernization of the country’s largest hydropower plant, Toktogul HPP, which began in March, is now 80% complete.
Located on the Naryn River, the Toktogul HPP comprises four hydroelectric units and with a total generating capacity of 1320 MW, provides about 40% of the country’s electricity.
The rotor at the hydro unit No. 1 has been assembled and installed and when fully modernized later in 2024, the service life of the Toktogul HPP will increase by 25-30 years, ensuring a reliable and uninterrupted power supply in autumn-winter and increase the power plant’s generating capacity by 60 MW to 1380 MW.
In recent years, since Kyrgyzstan has been unable to produce enough electricity to meet the growing demand, electricity has been imported from neighboring countries. In 2023, the volume of imported electricity amounted to 3.2 billion kWh. and Kyrgyz Minister of Energy Taalaibek Ibrayev reported that in the first half of 2024, Kyrgyzstan imported 2.02 billion kWh of electricity, including 909.8 million kWh from Russia and Kazakhstan, 837.5 million kWh from Turkmenistan, and 275.3 million kWh from Uzbekistan.
During the first half of this year, Kyrgyzstan produced 7.07 billion kWh of electricity, including 6.2 billion kWh generated by hydroelectric power plants and 870 million kWh by thermal (coal-fired) power plants.
In addition to updating its current facilities, the Ministry of Energy has committed to the construction of the Kambarata-1 HPP which destined to become Central Asia’s largest hydroelectric power plant, aims to end Kyrgyzstan’s power shortages.
Confident in the success of such measures, Chairman of the Kyrgyz Cabinet of Ministers, Akylbek Japarov, has announced that Kyrgyzstan will become both energy-sufficient and in a position to begin exporting electricity by 2026.