Tag: Electricity Grids

  • Istanbul blackout leaves millions in dark

    Istanbul blackout leaves millions in dark

    By Ivan Watson and Yesim Comert, CNN

    January 14, 2012 — Updated 1339 GMT (2139 HKT)

    STORY HIGHLIGHTS

    Millions are left without power in Istanbul

    Istanbul is Turkey’s largest city

    The blackout is at least 20 kilometers wide

    Outages were also reported in western Turkey

    Istanbul (CNN) — A major power blackout hit Turkey’s largest city Saturday afternoon, leaving millions of residents without electricity while shutting down Istanbul’s subway and tram systems.

    Officials with the Istanbul governor’s emergency situation directorate told CNN the massive outage appeared to be caused by a failure on a main power transfer line running from the Western city of Bursa.

    “There was no power in all of Istanbul,” one official said. Another added, “We think there was also no power in Izmit and Adapazari,” referring to two other cities in western Turkey.

    Istanbul is Turkey’s cultural and commercial hub, with a population of more than 12 million people.

    The sparkling lights along Istanbul’s main pedestrian thoroughfare, Istiklal Caddesi, went completely dark as snow began falling on the city.

    In subway stations, lights were on in the tunnels but escalators stopped operating. Meanwhile, a message repeated over the loudspeaker system announcing “due to a technical problem the metro is not running.”

    The blackout reached from the neighborhoods of Istinye to Atakoy, a distance of around 20 kilometers.

    After at least an hour of darkness, residents reported some power returned to the neighborhood of Kadikoy on the eastern side of Istanbul.

    via Istanbul blackout leaves millions in dark – CNN.com.

  • Turkey Power Grid Auctions Draw $5.1 Billion in Bids

    Turkey Power Grid Auctions Draw $5.1 Billion in Bids

    By Steve Bryant and Ali Berat Meric

    (Updates with result of third auction in first, third, seventh paragraphs.)

    Dec. 7 (Bloomberg) — Turkey drew total bids of $5.1 billion in auctions of three power grids in the Asian half of Istanbul and in the southern cities of Adana and Antalya.

    MMEKA Makine Ithalat Pazarlama & Ticaret AS, controlled by businessman Mehmet Emin Karamehmet, former chairman of the country’s biggest mobile phone company, placed the winning bid of $1.8 billion for the network in Istanbul, beating 10 rivals in the auction in Ankara today, according to Ahmet Aksu, the head of state asset sales.

    The results give MMEKA control of the grid in both halves of Turkey’s biggest city and brings to $15.9 billion the total bids in the country’s drive to divest control of power distribution to non-state companies. Today’s auction completed the sale of grids in the hands of Aksu’s sales agency.

    Turkey is selling grids and generators to attract private investment to an industry where demand is set to rise 6 percent annually, according to estimates published Nov. 9 by Deloitte LLP. The country needs as much as $150 billion in energy investment by 2023, Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said Nov. 24.

    MMEKA in August offered $2.99 billion for the grid on the European side of Istanbul. Controlling all of Istanbul will allow the company to “optimize” supply, Mehmet Kazanci, Karamehmet’s partner, told reporters after the sale. He declined to comment on financing for the company’s bids.

    Adana Network

    Yildizlar SSS Holding AS won the auction of the Adana grid with a bid of $2.1 billion. Ankara-based Yildizlar owns silver mining company Eti Gumus AS and bought the grid in the western Osmangazi region in June for $485 million.

    Park Holding AS, the group of companies owned by businessman Turgay Ciner that has interests from power generation to media, placed the winning bid of $1.2 billion for the grid in Antalya in the last of the sales.

    The asset sales agency has now sold 18 grids in auctions this year and last. Some of those sales are yet to be completed and payment is likely next year, when the government aims for 13.7 billion liras ($9.3 billion) in revenue from selling assets, according to the medium-term economic program.

    The agency received a total of 39 bids for today’s sales, it said last week. Bidders registered for the Istanbul grid sale include Enerjisa Enerji Uretim AS, the joint venture between Haci Omer Sabanci Holding AS and Austria’s Verbund AG. The Istanbul grid drew 11 bidders, Antalya 15 and Adana 13.

    Istanbul Anadolu Yakasi Elektrik Dagitim AS, also known as Ayedas, serves about 2.2 million commercial and household subscribers in the eastern half of Istanbul, according to information given to reporters at today’s sale. About 7.5 percent of the grid’s energy is stolen, according to the website.

    Akdeniz Elektrik Dagitim AS has 1.5 million subscribers around Antalya, with a theft rate of 9 percent. Toroslar Elektrik Dagitim AS, which provides power to 2.7 million subscribers in and around Adana, has a theft rate of about 8 percent.

    –Editors: Alex Devine, Will Kennedy.

    To contact the reporters on this story: Steve Bryant in Ankara at sbryant5@bloomberg.net; Ali Berat Meric in Ankara at americ@bloomberg.net

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg in Jerusalem at phirschberg@bloomberg.net.

    via Turkey Power Grid Auctions Draw $5.1 Billion in Bids – BusinessWeek.

  • Turkey Selling Final Three Electricity Grids, Including Istanbul, Antalya

    Turkey Selling Final Three Electricity Grids, Including Istanbul, Antalya

    Turkey will today sell the last three power grids in a series of auctions that have already drawn more than $10 billion in bids from local and foreign investors.

    The state asset sales agency will offer the network on the Asian side of Istanbul, the country’s biggest city, the grid near the southern tourism hub of Antalya, and the supplier of power to the Mediterranean port region around Adana at the sale in Ankara.

    Turkey is selling power grids and generators to attract private investment into an industry where demand is set to rise at 6 percent annually, according to estimates published Nov. 9 by Deloitte LLP. The country needs as much as $150 billion in energy investment by 2023, Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said Nov. 24.

    The asset sales agency sold 15 grids in auctions this year and last, drawing a total of $10.8 billion in offers. Some of those sales are yet to be completed and payment is likely next year, when the government aims for 13.7 billion liras ($9.3 billion) in revenue from selling assets, according to the medium-term economic program.

    The agency received a total of 39 bids for today’s sales, it said last week. Bidders registered for the Istanbul grid sale include Enerjisa Enerji Uretim AS, the joint venture between Haci Omer Sabanci Holding AS and Austria’s Verbund, and Mmeka Makina Ithalat Paz. & Tic. AS, which placed the $2.99 billion winning bid for the other half of Istanbul’s network on Aug. 9.

    Istanbul Anadolu Yakasi Elektrik Dagitim AS, also known as Ayedas, serves about 2 million commercial and household subscribers in the eastern half of Istanbul, according to 2008 data published on the agency’s website. About 9 percent of the grid’s energy is stolen, according to the website.

    Akdeniz Elektrik Dagitim AS has 1.5 million subscribers around Antalya, with a theft rate of nine percent.

    Toroslar Elektrik Dagitim AS, which provides power to 2.6 million subscribers in and around Adana, also has a theft rate of about nine percent.

    The Istanbul grid drew 11 bidders, Akdeniz 15 and Toros 13.

    To contact the reporters on this story: Steve Bryant in Ankara at sbryant5@bloomberg.net; Ali Berat Meric in Ankara at americ@bloomberg.net

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg in Jerusalem at phirschberg@bloomberg.net.

    via Turkey Selling Final Three Electricity Grids, Including Istanbul, Antalya – Bloomberg.