January 30, 2019. Moscow,
Russia. PJSC
RusHydro (ticker symbol: MICEX-RTS, LSE: HYDR; OTCQX: RSHYY)
announces operating results for the 4th
quarter and full year ended December 31 2019, of the parent company
and subsidiaries of RusHydro Group reflected in consolidated
financial statements.
Key
highlights of 2019
142,840
GWh – total electricity production (-1.0% y-o-y) including
Boguchanskaya hydropower plant[1].
Solid
results on the back of increased inflows to the reservoirs of the
Volga-Kama cascade in 2H and to the reservoirs of HPPs in the Far
East throughout the year aided by new capacity commissioning and
modernization of existing facilities, increase in electricity
consumption by 3.3% in the Far East.
6
hydropower plants have set new all-time high annual record outputs:
Boguchanskaya HPP (16,104 GWh), Bureyskaya HPP (7,341 GWh),
Votkinskaya HPP (3,642 GWh), Kamskaya HPP (2,732 GWh),
Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP (614 GWh) and Kubanskaya PSHPP (14.8 GWh).
94,525
GWh – electricity output from hydro and pumped storage plants
(-4.0% y-o-y).
31,779
GWh – electricity output from thermal power plants (+0.1% y-o-y).
433 GWh
– electricity output from alternative renewable energy facilities
(+0.5% y-o-y).
29,771
thousand Gcal – heat output from thermal power plants (+0.4%
y-o-y) driven by lower air temperatures in most Far Eastern Federal
District’s regions.
39,683.3
MW – total installed electric capacity of RusHydro Group incl.
Boguchanskaya HPP as of December 31, 2019 (+297.2
MW to 2018
following commissioning of Nizhne-Bureyskaya HPP and Sakhalinskaya
GRES-2, decommissioning of Sakhalinskaya GRES and partial
decommissioning of Yakutskaya GRES as well as capacity uprate
following rehabilitation & modernization of equipment).
19,021.4
GCal/h – total heat output capacity of the Group as of December
31, 2019 (+98
Gcal to 2018).
19,490
GWh – sales by Group’s electricity retail companies in 2019
(-3.9% y-o-y).
630 MW
- capacity connected to RusHydro Group’s grids in the Far East
(+8.2% y-o-y).
16,104
GWh - electricity output from the Boguchanskaya HPP (+18.3%
y-o-y)[1].
Key
highlights of 4Q 2019 and hydrological situation
26,003
GWh – electricity output from hydro and pumped storage plants
(+18.8% to 4Q’19).
9,029
GWh – electricity output from thermal power plants (no change to
4Q’19).
121 GWh
– electricity output from alternative renewable
energy facilities (+4.0% to 4Q’19).
As of January 1, 2020, water storage at
reservoirs of the Volga-Kama cascade is 33% above the average level;
at the reservoirs of the Far East and in the South of Russia –
slightly above the normal level; at the reservoirs of Siberia – at
the normal level.
In the first quarter of 2020, water
inflows to the reservoirs of the Volga-Kama cascade are expected to
be 1.3-1.6x the normal level; to the reservoirs of Siberia – at
the normal level or slightly above it.
Installed electric capacity of
RusHydro Group
RusHydro Group’s installed electric capacity
increased following commissioning of Nizhne-Bureyskaya HPP (320 MW)
and Sakhalinskaya GRES-2 (120 MW) in the Far East, decommissioning of
Sakhalinskaya GRES (84 MW), partial decommissioning of Yakutskaya
GRES (127 MW) and capacity uprate following rehabilitation &
modernization (63 MW) and installation of solar panels at
Nizhne-Bureyskaya HPP (1.3 MW).
MW
|
Dec 31, 2019
|
Dec 31, 2018
|
Center of Russia HPPs /PSPPs
|
11,782.4
|
11,730.1
|
S. of Russia and N. Caucasus
|
2,946.0
|
2,946.0
|
Siberia
|
7,211.0
|
7,201.0
|
Total for price zones of Russia
|
21,939.4
|
21,877.0
|
HPPs of the Far East
|
5 597.6
|
5 277.6
|
RAO ES East
|
8 505.9
|
8 590.8
|
Geothermal PPs, RES
|
82.5
|
82.2
|
Total for non-price and isolated zones of Russia
|
14 186.0
|
13 950.6
|
HPPs in Armenia
|
561.4
|
561.4
|
TOTAL
|
37 030.6
|
36 389.1
|
incl. by HPPs, PSPPs2
|
28 443.9
|
27 716.1
|
incl. by TPPs and other
|
8 505.9
|
8 590.8
|
incl. by geothermal, RES
|
82.5
|
82.2
|
Boguchanskaya HPP
|
2 997.0
|
2 997.0
|
TOTAL (incl. Boguchanskaya HPP)
|
39 683.3
|
39 386.1
|
Installed
heat capacity of
RusHydro Group
RusHydro Group’s installed heat capacity
increased following commissioning of peaking boiler plant at
Yakutskaya GRES (300 Gcal/h).
GCal/h
|
Dec 31, 2019
|
Dec 31, 2018
|
JSC DGK, incl.
|
12,813.4
|
12,813.4
|
Primorye power system
|
2,755.0
|
2,755.0
|
Khabarovsk power system
|
7,429.7
|
7,429.7
|
Amur power system
|
1,243.7
|
1,243.7
|
South-Yakutia power district
|
1,385.0
|
1,385.0
|
JSC RAO ES East (CHP Vostochnaya)
|
432.6
|
432.6
|
JSC DGK and JSC RAO ES East
|
13,246.1
|
13,246.1
|
Yakutsk power system, incl.
|
2,545.8
|
2,460.4
|
PJSC Yakutskenergo3
|
1,726.2
|
1,613.2
|
JSC Sakhaenergo
|
84.9
|
84.9
|
JSC Teploenergoservice
|
734.7
|
762.3
|
Kamchatka power system, incl.
|
1,273.4
|
1,244.3
|
PJSC Kamchatskenergo
|
1,226.3
|
1,201.4
|
JSC KSEN
|
47.1
|
42.9
|
Magadan power system (PJSC Magadanenergo)
|
773.3
|
773.3
|
Chukotka AO power system (JSC Chukotenergo)
|
399.3
|
399.3
|
Sakhalin power system (PJSC Sakhalinenergo)
|
783.5
|
800.7
|
Total isolated and other power systems
|
5,775.3
|
5,677.3
|
TOTAL
|
19,021.4
|
18,923.4
|
Electricity
generation by the plants of RusHydro Group
GWh
|
4Q’19
|
4Q’18
|
chg, %
|
2019
|
2018
|
Chg, %
|
Center of Russia
|
13,002
|
8,854
|
46.8%
|
42,534
|
44,682
|
-4.8%
|
S. of Russia and N. Caucasus
|
1,030
|
1,345
|
-23.4%
|
6,528
|
7,447
|
-12.3%
|
Siberia
|
6,653
|
7,305
|
-8.9%
|
27,131
|
29,544
|
-8.2%
|
Total for the price zones
|
20,685
|
17,504
|
18.2%
|
76,193
|
81,673
|
-6.7%
|
Far East (HPP, geothermal)
|
4,681
|
3,567
|
31.9%
|
15,757
|
14,085
|
11.2%
|
RAO ES East Subgroup
|
9,752
|
9,914
|
-1.6%
|
34,362
|
34,464
|
-0.3%
|
Armenia
|
35
|
44
|
-22.2%
|
424
|
412
|
2.9%
|
TOTAL
|
35,153
|
31,030
|
13.3%
|
126,737
|
130,686
|
-3.0%
|
incl. by HPPs, PSPPs2
|
26,003
|
21,882
|
18.8%
|
94,525
|
98,502
|
-4.0%
|
incl. by TPPs
|
9,029
|
9,030
|
0.0%
|
31,779
|
31,752
|
0.1%
|
Incl. by alt. renewables (geothermal, solar, wind)
|
121
|
117
|
4.0%
|
433
|
431
|
0.5%
|
Boguchanskaya HPP1
|
4,318
|
3,324
|
29.9%
|
16,104
|
13,610
|
18.3%
|
The underlying factors of the production change in
2019 were:
water inflows to the reservoirs of HPPs on
the Volga-Kama cascade and Far East above the normal level;
warm climate conditions and heavy rainfall in
October-November resulted in water inflows to the reservoirs of the
Volga-Kama cascade 2x above the normal level;
water inflows to the reservoirs in Siberia at
the long-run average;
decrease electricity generation by thermal
power plants in the Far East on the back of increased production of
HPPs in UES of East by 10.2% as well electricity consumption growth
in the Far Eastern Federal District by 3.3%;
decrease of electricity sales to UES of
Siberia and China by 99.1 GWh (-2.7%).
Center of
Russia
In the beginning of 2019, hydropower plants of the
Volga-Kama cascade were operating under the winter period regime of
pre-flooding reservoir drawdown. The water reserves of the cascade’s
reservoirs are higher by 17% and by 28% as compared to the normal
level and last year, respectively.
In the first quarter of 2018, inflow to most of
the reservoirs on Volga and Kama was close to the normal level. Total
water inflow to the reservoirs of the Volga-Kama cascade reached 24.9
km3 (normal level – 21.3 km3).
In the second quarter, water inflows to the
reservoirs of the HPPs of the Volga-Kama cascade were predominantly
below the normal level: inflows to Uglichskoye, Rybinskoye,
Gorkovskoye and Nizhnekamskoye reservoirs were 20-40% below, inflows
to Ivankovskoye, Cheboksarskoye and Saratovskoye reservoirs were 60%
below, while inflows to Volgogradskoye reservoir were 80% below the
normal level. At the same time inflows to Kuybishevskoye, Kamskoye
and Votkinskoye reservoirs were at the normal level.
In the third quarter, water inflows to the
majority of reservoirs on the Volga-Kama cascade were at the normal
level. Inflows to Kuybishevskoye and Kamskoye reservoirs were 1.4 and
2.3 times the normal level, respectively on the back of rainfall
flood. By the end of third quarter water storage at the reservoirs of
the cascade were 18% above the normal level.
In the fourth quarter, water inflows to the
reservoirs of the Volga-Kama cascade was above the normal level:
inflows to Ivankovskoye, Gorkovskoye, Cheboksarskoye and
Nizhnekamskoye reservoirs were 1.3-2.4x the normal level, while
inflows to Rybinskoye, Kuybishevskoye and Kamskoye reservoirs were
2.5-3.8x the normal level. In the fourth quarter, the hydropower
plants of the Volga-Kama cascade were operating with increased
debits. By the end of the quarter water storage at the reservoirs of
the cascade were 32% above the normal level.
Total water inflow to the reservoirs on Volga and
Kama in 4Q was 78.1 km3 or twice above the normal level.
Total electricity
production by the hydropower plants of the Volga-Kama cascade and
Zagorsksaya pumped storage in the fourth quarter of 2019 increased by
46.8% to 13,002 GWh, in 2019 production amounted to 42,534 GWh
(-4.8%) as compared to 2018.
South of
Russia and North Caucasus
Water inflow to the reservoir of Chirkeyskaya HPP
in 1Q 2019 was 20% above the normal level. Average daily water inflow
to the reservoir of Chirkeyskaya HPP in the months of January and
February 2019 was 75.7 m3. The HPP is operating under
water economy regime to preserve high water level in the reservoir as
water reserves in the snow deposits of the Sulak River are below the
normal level.
In the second quarter of 2019, water inflow to
Chirkeyskaya HPP was close to the normal level. By the beginning of
the third quarter water storage at the reservoirs of the HPPS of the
Sulak cascade were 5% above the normal level and 4% above the level
observed during the same period last year.
In the third quarter water inflow to the reservoir
of Chirkeyskaya HPP was 35% below the normal level. By the end of
third quarter water storage at the reservoir was at the normal level.
In the fourth quarter, water inflow to the
reservoir of Chirkeyskaya HPP was 25% below the normal level. By the
end of the quarter, water storage at the reservoir was 7% above the
normal level.
In 4Q
2019, total electricity production by the hydropower plants in the
South of Russia and North Caucasus decreased by 23.4% to 1,030 GWh as
compared to the corresponding period last year, in 2019 production
amounted to 6,528 GWh (-12.3%).
Water inflow to the reservoirs on the rivers of
Siberia in the first quarter of 2019 was higher than normal level by
15%.
In the second quarter of 2019 water inflows to
Novosibirskoye and Sayano-Shushenskoye reservoirs was 20% below the
normal level. By the end of the spring flooding season the reservoir
was filled to the normal reservoir water surface of 113.5 m allowing
enough water storage for the low water season as well as for upcoming
heating season.
Water inflow to the Sayano-Shushenskoye reservoir
in the second quarter was 30% below the normal level as low air
temperatures delayed the start of spring flooding. By the end of June
inflows increased significantly following extra rainfall and snowmelt
in the mountains allowing filling the reservoir up to the normal
level.
In the third quarter of 2019, water inflow to
Novosibirskoye reservoir was 20% above the normal level, to
Sayano-Shushenskoye reservoir – 15% above the normal level. At
Sayano-Shushenskoye reservoir following extended cold front, flooding
season shifted to the summer before transitioning to rainfall flood
allowing filling of the reservoir under normal conditions. Starting
from August 16, additional water was discharged through spillways. In
the third quarter, the HPP operated under maximum capacity for the
first time in its history. This became possible thanks to effective
coordination with the System Operator.
In the fourth quarter of 2019, water inflows to
Sayano-Shushenskoye and Novosibirskoye reservoirs were 20% above the
normal level. By the end of the quarter, water storage at the
reservoir was at the normal level.
Overall
electricity production by the hydropower plants in Siberia decreased
by 8.9% in 4Q 2019 to 6,653 GWh, in 2019 production amounted to
27,131 GWh (-8.2%).
Boguchanskaya HPP produced 4,318 GWh in 4Q 2019 and 16,104 GWh in
2019 - an increase of 29.9% and 18.3% over the corresponding period
last year respectively.
In the first quarter of 2019, water inflow to
Kolymskoye and Zeyskoye reservoirs was 25-40% above the normal level.
Water inflow to the cross section of Bureyskaya HPP decreased
following a landslide that occurred in December of 2018. The
situation has been restored in February 2019 following formation of
an outlet. Since then 1.16 km3 of water has entered the
segment of the reservoir adjacent to the dam. In the first quarter of
2019, the facility was operating under normal conditions, in the
pre-flooding reservoir drawdown regime.
In 2Q 2019, water inflow to Kolymskoye reservoir
was 35% above the normal level while inflow to the Zeyskoye reservoir
is below the normal level. Inflow to the Bureyskoye reservoir was 60%
above the normal level. Up to 50% of the inflow was accumulated in
the reservoir.
In 3Q 2019, water inflow to Kolymskoye and
Zeyskoye reservoirs was 90% and 20% above the normal level,
respectively. In July, the water level on Kolyma River was well above
the normal level and the reservoir was quickly filled to the normal
water surface level. Flood on the Kolyma River began in August. While
short, it was very powerful as the peak inflow on August 6 was
measured at 11,414 m3/sec. Such inflow occurs once in
every 1,000 years. Optimal reservoir regime control, allowed to
decrease the flood’s peak by 40% reducing its effect on the lower
Kolyma. In the Amur region, following substantial rainfall, emergency
situation was introduced. On Zeyskaya HPP, the extra water inflows
from the flooding were accumulated in the reservoir. On July 23, at
the peak of the flooding average daily inflow was measured at 11,510
m3/sec with only 732 m3/sec discharged from the
spillway at the HPP. Effective operation of Zeyskaya HPP prevented
significant flooding in the region.
In 4Q, water inflow to Zeyskoye and Kolymskoye
reservoirs was 40-60% above the normal level. By the end of the
quarter, water storage at the reservoirs was slightly above the
normal level.
Total
electricity generated by hydro and geothermal power plants in the Far
East (not included in the RAO ES East subgroup) increased by 31.9% in
the fourth quarter of 2019 and by 11.2% in 2019 to 4,681 GWh and
15,757 GWh respectively against the same periods last year.
Total electricity generated by RAO ES East
subgroup in the fourth quarter of 2019 amounted to 9,752 GWh, a
decrease of 1.6% as compared to the same period last year. JSC Far
Eastern Generating Company’s (DGK) share of electricity generated
was 73% or 7,109 GWh, a decrease of 4.1% against the same period last
year. Production increase of HPPs located in UES of East by 26.8%,
increase in electricity consumption by 6.2% to 14,075 GWh as well as
decrease in electricity sales to UES of Siberia by 85.1% to 22.7 GWh
were the main drivers behind the decline.
In 2019,
total electricity generation by RAO ES East subgroup decreased by
0.3% to 34,367 GWh as compared to 2018.
Decrease is primarily driven by RusHydro’s HPP production
increase in UES of East by 10.2% and growth of electricity
consumption in the Far East Federal District by 3.3% to 48,582 GWh.
In 2019 electricity sales to UES of Siberia and China decreased by
2.7% to 3,511 GWh as compared to 2018.
Heat
output by thermal plants of RAO ES East Subgroup in the fourth
quarter of 2019 increased by 7.2% to 10,803 GCal as compared to the
corresponding period last year.
The increase came on the back of lower air temperatures across all
regions with the exception of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. In
2019 heat output increased by 0.4% against 2018 to 29,770 GCal.
The increase came on the back of lower air temperatures across all
regions with the exception of Sakhalin and Chukotka Autonomous
Okrug.
Heat
output by thermal plants of RAO ES of the East Subgroup
‘000 GCal
|
4Q’19
|
4Q’18
|
chg, %
|
2019
|
2018
|
chg,%
|
JSC DGK, incl.
|
7,414
|
7,072
|
4.8%
|
20,079
|
20,858
|
-3.7%
|
Primorye power system
|
1,413
|
1,351
|
4.5%
|
4,070
|
4,729
|
-13.9%
|
Khabarovsk power system
|
4,327
|
4,114
|
5.2%
|
11,709
|
11,776
|
-0.6%
|
Amur power system
|
930
|
852
|
9.1%
|
2,354
|
2,322
|
1.4%
|
South-Yakutsk power district
|
744
|
754
|
-1.3%
|
1,947
|
2,030
|
-4.1%
|
JSC RAO ES East (CHP Vostochnaya)
|
244
|
-
|
-
|
809
|
-
|
-
|
JSC DGK and JSC RAO ES East
|
7,658
|
7,072
|
8.3%
|
20,888
|
20,858
|
0.1%
|
Yakutsk power system, incl.
|
1,483
|
1,369
|
8.3%
|
3,794
|
3,732
|
1.7%
|
PJSC Yakutskenergo[3]
|
1,005
|
887
|
13.4%
|
2,560
|
2,425
|
5.6%
|
JSC Sakhaenergo
|
24
|
27
|
-10.3%
|
73
|
82
|
-11.2%
|
JSC Teploenergoservice
|
454
|
455
|
-0.3%
|
1,161
|
1,225
|
-5.3%
|
Kamchatka power system, incl.
|
638
|
626
|
1.9%
|
2,000
|
1,974
|
1.3%
|
PJSC Kamchatskenergo
|
610
|
597
|
2.2%
|
1,920
|
1,895
|
1.3%
|
JSC KSEN
|
28
|
29
|
-3.3%
|
80
|
79
|
0.9%
|
Magadan power system
|
406
|
386
|
5.0%
|
1,220
|
1,201
|
1.6%
|
Chukotka AO power system
|
127
|
134
|
-5.6%
|
414
|
415
|
-0.3%
|
Sakhalin power system
|
491
|
489
|
0.5%
|
1,454
|
1,469
|
-1.0%
|
Total isolated and other power systems
|
3,145
|
3,004
|
4.7%
|
8,882
|
8,791
|
1.0%
|
TOTAL
|
10,803
|
10,076
|
7.2%
|
29,770
|
29,649
|
0.4%
|
Armenia
Electricity generation by the Sevan-Hrazdan
cascade of hydropower plants in Armenia in the fourth quarter of 2019
decreased by 22.2% to 35 GWh, in 2019 – increased by 2.9% to 424
GWh as compared to the corresponding period of last year. The power
generation by the plants of the cascade is dependent on water inflows
of the Hrazdan river and water discharge from Sevan Lake.
Electricity
retail
Total electricity output by RusHydro Group’s
energy retail companies in 4Q 2019 was in line with 4Q 2018 at 14,126
GWh, in 2019 electricity output amounted to 49,506 GWh, a decrease of
1.6% as compared to the corresponding period last year. The decrease
came mainly on the back of climate factor as well as termination of
supply agreements with customers.
Total electricity output by RusHydro’s retail
companies, operating in Chuvashia, Ryazan and Krasnoyarsk regions in
the fourth quarter of 2019 decreased by 2.4% to 5,436 GWh as compared
to 4Q’18. In 2019, total output decreased by 3.9% as compared to
2018 to 19,490 GWh. Increase in output at ESC RusHydro is driven by
new supply agreements as well as increase in electricity consumption
by JSC Polyus Krasnoyarsk and Yandex DC Vladimir LLC.
Electricity output by PJSC DEK (energy retail
company operating in the Primorskiy Krai, Khabarovskiy Krai, Amur
region and Jewish Autonomous region, the main supplier of electricity
to the population in the second non-price zone of the wholesale
energy market) in the fourth quarter of 2019 amounted to 6,214 GWh,
an increase of 5.0% as compared to 4Q’18. Favorable performance is
primarily driven by increase in consumption by industrial consumers
and households. In 2019 electricity output increased by 1.6% to
21,240 GWh as compared to last year as a result of increase in
consumption by industrial consumers.
Total electricity output by RusHydro’s companies
located in the isolated energy systems in the Far East Federal
District amounted to 2,476 GWh in 4Q 2019, a decrease of 4.0% as
compared to the same period last year. In 2019 total electricity
output decreased by 3.9% to 8,776 GWh as compared to the same period
last year.
Electricity
output by RusHydro Group’s retail companies, GWh
GWh
|
4Q’19
|
4Q’18
|
chg, %
|
2019
|
2018
|
chg, %
|
PJSC Krasnoyarskenergosbyt
|
3,360
|
3,485
|
-3.6%
|
11,880
|
12,611
|
-5.8%
|
JSC Chuvash retail company
|
923
|
937
|
-1.5%
|
3,323
|
3,369
|
-1.4%
|
PJSC Ryazan retail company
|
671
|
716
|
-6.4%
|
2,449
|
2,650
|
-7.6%
|
JSC ESC RusHydro
|
482
|
429
|
12.3%
|
1,788
|
1,643
|
8.9%
|
Total
|
5,436
|
5,567
|
-2.4%
|
19,490
|
20,273
|
-3.9%
|
PJSC DEK (for reference)
|
6,214
|
5,918
|
5.0%
|
21,240
|
20,913
|
1.6%
|
Isolated energy systems (for reference)
|
2,476
|
2,580
|
-4.0%
|
8,776
|
9,131
|
-3.9%
|
Total by Group
|
14,126
|
14,065
|
0.4%
|
49,506
|
50,317
|
-1.6%
|
Power
transmission and grid connection
Total power transmission and distribution via
RusHydro Group’s electricity grids in the Far East decreased by
0.4% to 35,283.8 GWh, 25,046.1 GWh of which was distributed by the
largest grid operator in the Far East – JSC DRSK.
Total capacity connections to RusHydro Group’s
grids in 2019 amounted to 630 MW as compared to 582 MW in 2018
despite the 7% decrease in technical connection agreements. Favorable
performance is driven by industrial production growth as well as
growth of medium and large businesses as consumers’ with capacity
above 670 kW desire to increase maximum available capacity.
In 2019, RusHydro Group’s companies have entered
into grid connection agreements with the following consumers:
Solntsevsky Coal Mine LLC (Sakhalin), maximum
capacity of 25 MW;
East Mining Company LLC (Sakhalin), maximum
capacity of 19 MW;
Amursk POX hub (Amur region), maximum
capacity of 51 MW;
Teutedzhak Mine LLC (Magadan region), maximum
capacity of 25 MW;
JSC Zhatayskaya Shipyard (Sakha Republic
(Yakutia)), maximum capacity of 8.5 MW.
Water
inflows forecast
According to the forecast of the Hydrometeorology
Center of Russia, the following dynamics of water inflows to the
major reservoirs are expected in the 1st quarter of 2020:
Total water inflows to the majority of
reservoirs on Volga and Kama are expected to be 1.3-2.1x the
long-run average;
Inflows to the reservoirs in Siberia are
expected to be close to or slightly above the long-run average;
Inflows to Chirkeyskoye reservoir in North
Caucasus are expected to be 10-25% below the long-run average;
Inflows to Zeyskoe and Kolymskoye reservoirs
in the Far East are expected to be 1.6-1.9x the long-run average.
[1]
The Boguchanskaya hydropower plant is part of the Boguchanskiy Energy
and Metals Complex (BEMO), a 50/50 joint venture (JV) between
RusHydro and UC RUSAL, and is not part of RusHydro Group. According
to RusHydro’s shareholding in the JV (50%), the results of the
plant are reported in the official financial statements in “Share
of results of associates and jointly controlled entities”.
Operations of the HPP have been put into the press-release for
general reference.
[2]
Includes generation by HPPs of JSC RusHydro, Kolymskaya HPP and
Viluiskie HPPs, part of RAO ES East Subgroup.
[3]
Prior to 2019 PJSC Yakutskenergo was operating in isolated power
system, since 2019 the west and central power districts became a part
of UES of East
|