Vizag Steel - NTPC joint venture to set up 150 MW power project
27 Jul 2007
Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Limted (RINL), the corporate arm of Visakhapatnam Steel Plant, has and the Natioan Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) will form an equal joint venture to set up a 150 MW captive power plant at Visakhapatnam to meet RINL''s power requirement.
The 50:50 JV, to be called NTPC-RINL Power Company Ltd, will be under management control of NTPC, which will also nominate its chairman. The proposed joint venture will supply power to RINL, which is currently undertaking an expansion programme that will take its capacity to 6.3 million tonnes.
The steel plant currently operates at 120 per cent of the rated capacity with 3.6 million tonnes of liquid steel annually and is expected to touch 6.3 million tonnes by 2008 and 16 million tonnes by 2017-18.
RINL''s expected demand for power when the plant reaches 6.3 million tonnes capacity has been estimated at 418 MW, with the generation of 226 MW of power at present meeting its current requirement meets its present requirement.
The power generation from the proposed gas turbine combined cycle power project unit will augment the power supply by 150 MW. The gas turbine technology is environment friendly and more efficient in terms of power generation and uses the latest available low calorific value lean gases and envisages utilising the surplus gas available at the steel plant.
NTPC
has also signed an MoU with Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) for development
of "automated boiler tube inspection system in coal based thermal power plants".
The collaboration will help the company to build competency in new technology
development for inspection of boiler tubes. The MoU also provides for future multiplication
of such systems for which all necessary help will be extended by BARC, NTPC said
in a separate filing with the BSE.
Latest articles
Featured articles
The New Oil (Part 4): Can Technology Break the Dependency?
By Cygnus | 16 Jan 2026
Can magnet recycling and rare-earth-free motors reduce global dependence on strategic minerals? Part 4 explores breakthroughs, limits and timelines.
India’s Gig Economy Reset: The End of ‘10-Minute Delivery’ Hype?
By Cygnus | 14 Jan 2026
India’s quick-commerce sector is shifting away from “10-minute delivery” hype amid worker safety concerns and rising regulation. Here’s what changes—and what doesn’t.
AI Is Becoming the New Electricity Crisis: Why the Real Bottleneck Is Megawatts
By Axel Miller | 14 Jan 2026
AI is turning into an electricity crisis as data centres scale from chips to megawatts. Grid bottlenecks, copper demand and cooling limits are now the real AI constraints.
The New Oil: Can Technology End the Rare Earth Dependency?
By Cygnus | 14 Jan 2026
Magnet recycling and rare-earth-free motors are emerging as technology escape routes from critical mineral dependency. But timelines are slower than the hype suggests.
The New Oil: Inside the Processing Gap — Why Mining Alone Won’t Fix the Critical Minerals Crisis
By Cygnus | 13 Jan 2026
Mining isn’t the real bottleneck in critical minerals. The 2026 processing gap — refining, separation and chemical conversion — is the chokepoint reshaping global supply chains, industrial policy and geopolitics.
The Battle for the Skies: Air India’s Widebody Bet vs IndiGo’s XLR Gambit
By Cygnus | 12 Jan 2026
Air India vs IndiGo fleet strategy 2026: Air India expands with new Boeing 787-9 widebodies while IndiGo uses A321XLR efficiency and IndiGoStretch to reshape long-haul economics.
The Custom Dreamliner: Air India Reclaims Its Skies with First Post-Privatisation 787-9
By Axel Miller | 12 Jan 2026
Air India’s comeback under Tata enters a new phase as its first post-privatisation custom Dreamliner strengthens the fleet renewal push for premium long-haul travel.
The New Oil: How the 2026 lithium and graphite bottleneck could stall global EV growth
By Cygnus | 12 Jan 2026
Lithium and graphite are emerging as the key EV bottlenecks in 2026 as South America expands mining while China dominates processing and battery-grade conversion.
The New Oil: How the 2026 Rare Earth Shock Is Reshaping the Global Economy
By Cygnus | 09 Jan 2026
Japan launches a 6,000m deep-sea mission as China restricts rare earth exports. Discover how the 2026 “New Oil” crisis is redefining global high-tech trade.
