The North Auckland and Northland region covers the upper parts of the North Island, north of
Henderson. It includes the North Shore and
Waitakere township, the
Rodney District and the entire Northland region. The main electricity load centres in the region are the North Auckland urban areas,
Whangārei, and the
Marsden Point Oil Refinery. The North Auckland urban area is growing rapidly. Since the
Auckland Harbour Bridge opened in 1959, the North Shore alone has expanded nearly five-fold, from a population of 50,000 in the late 1950s to 229,000 in June 2011. The after diversity maximum demand (ADMD) for electricity in the North Auckland and Northland region is forecast to grow from 908 megawatts in 2012 to 1254 megawatts by 2027. This is an average annual growth rate of 2.2 percent, which is higher than the national average of 1.7 percent per annum. There are no large generating stations operating in the region, although there are local generation schemes with a combined total output of around 54 megawatts. Two large generating stations were built in Northland in the late 1960s and early 1970s – the 250 MW
Marsden A and
Marsden B oil-fired thermal power stations at Marsden point . However, the
1973 oil crisis, the
1979 energy crisis, and the discovery of
Maui gas saw Marsden B mothballed before it was commissioned. Marsden A was relegated to a reserve generator during drought years before being decommissioned in 1997. Plans were developed in 2004 to refurbish and modify the Marsden B station to become a 300 MW
coal-fired power station, but these were subsequently scrapped in 2007 after widespread protest. Because of the lack of generation in the North Auckland and Northland region, nearly all of the electricity used in the area must be supplied via transmission lines that run through Auckland, carrying electricity from
Otahuhu, and generators in the Waikato region. Prior to the commissioning of the NAaN project, the main route for electricity transmission into the North Auckland and Northland region was through the double-circuit 220 kV Henderson to Otahuhu via
Southdown line. This is a high capacity line, rated to operate at 938/984 MVA (summer/winter) per circuit in normal circumstances and slightly higher during contingencies, but restricted to 915 MVA due to constraints at Henderson substation. There were also two double circuit 110 kV lines that run parallel to the 220 kV line via Hepburn Road (
Glendene) and
Mount Roskill, with one line going via
Māngere. However, these lines are of relatively low capacity and on their own could support only a very small proportion of the total load north of Mount Roskill. The line was also fast approaching capacity with the load growth, with some circuits expected to overload from 2017 during certain outages. The vulnerability of the transmission line was subsequently shown on 30 October 2009 at around 8:00am, when power was cut to the whole of Northland and most of the northern half of Auckland, affecting 280,000 consumers (14.5% of the country). A forklift carrying a shipping container accidentally hit one of the Henderson to Otahuhu circuits while the other circuit was out for maintenance, leaving the region supplied by the four low capacity 110 kV circuits. Power was restored to the entire region around 11:00am. ==Project timeline==