Nandipur Power Project

Nandipur Thermal
Power Project
CountryPakistan
LocationNandipur, Gujranwala, Punjab
Coordinates32°14′32″N 74°16′08″E / 32.24224539°N 74.26891526°E / 32.24224539; 74.26891526
StatusOperational
Construction began2008
Commission dateMarch 2015
Construction costRs. 57.4 bn
OwnerGovernment of Punjab
OperatorNandipur Thermal Power Generation Company Ltd.
Thermal power station
Primary fuelRLNG
Tertiary fuelFurnace
Combined cycle?Yes
Cogeneration?Yes
Power generation
Nameplate capacity425 MW (with potential of 525 MW)

The Nandipur Power Project is a 425 MW (with potential of 525 MW) combined cycle thermal power plant situated at Nandipur near Gujranwala in the Punjab province of Pakistan. Being constructed by the China Dongfang Electric Corporation, the project was completed in March 2015. The initial cost of the project was Rs. 27 billion, but this escalated during the revised project cycle-1 and totalled Rs. 58.42 bn at completion. The power plant faced a series of hiccups during and after launching its commercial operations. Prior and after construction, the project continued to attract a number of court cases, inquiries, investigations, audits, and political and commercial disputes. The plant collapsed after 5 days of operation, launching a series of inquiries ordered by then prime minister Nawaz Sharif.

The plant produced electricity at Rs. 12 per unit, with less than 43% utilisation . In order to make the project viable and to reduce annual losses, it was finally decided to convert the plant to RLNG. After a tug-of-war with NEPRA and other controversies, the plant was finally converted to RLNG in 2017 .