Siemens Energy signs Iraq contracts

10 March 2023

Iraq’s Electricity Ministry has awarded Germany’s Siemens Energy long-term service contracts for several power plants in the country.

The three service contracts, each lasting five years, are for the Al-Sadr, Kirkuk and Al-Rasheed power stations in Iraq.

The three plants have the capacity to generate more than 1GW of electricity.

“These contracts represent the first portion of prioritized projects under the Iraq Energy Agenda – Wave II agreement, which was signed in Berlin in January 2023 between Siemens Energy and the Ministry of Electricity of the Republic of Iraq,” Siemens said on 7 March.

The contracts aim to improve energy stability and availability, as well as provide training, skills, and employment opportunities for Iraqis.

In May 2021, Siemens Energy signed a contract with Iraq’s Electricity Ministry to rebuild the West Mosul 400-kilovolt (kV) substation, which was destroyed in 2014.

Siemens Energy’s scope of work includes the design, equipment manufacturing, construction, site delivery, testing and commissioning for the turnkey 400/132/11kV substation project together with the supply of 13 auto transformers.

The planned 400-kV station will supply approximately 30 stations with voltage levels of 132-kV and help tackle the severe shortage of power supply in Iraq's Nineveh province. German state-owned development bank KfW will finance the project.

In 2019, Siemens and the Electricity Ministry signed an implementation agreement for the execution of the Iraq Roadmap, which includes the addition of new and highly efficient power generation capacity, rehabilitation and upgrade of existing plants and the expansion of transmission and distribution networks.

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Jennifer Aguinaldo
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