man at Olkaria - some communities have been displaced by the power generation projects The first geothermal exploration of Olkaria started in 1955. Two unsuccessful test wells had been drilled by 1959. Little more was done until 1967, when 27 shallow wells up to were drilled, some of which emitted steam. Starting in 1970 the Kenya Power Company (now the
Kenya Electricity Generating Company, or KenGen) and the
United Nations Development Programme began systematic efforts to survey and then exploit the geothermal potential. Production wells were drilled and commercial generation of electricity started in July 1981 with a plant built by
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries containing a 15 MW turbo-generator. A second 15 MW turbine came online in December 1982 and a third in March 1985, bringing total output up to 45 MW of which 3.3MW is used to power the station itself. Thirty production wells had been sunk by 1999 of which twenty-seven were productive, each yielding from 1.5 MW to 8 MW. Currently, 15 wells are being used to power the Olkaria I station. Following rising power demands, a third station, Olkaria II was built with a production capacity of 105 MW with 5.2 MW used to power the station itself. It is powered by 3 Mitsubishi turbines, each capable of generating 35 MW. The steam is obtained from 22 wells, each producing an estimated 35 tonnes of steam per hour. As of 2005, KenGen owned the
Olkaria I (45 MW) and
Olkaria II (70 MW) power plants. A third power station with 48 MW capacity, Olkaria III, is privately owned by a subsidiary of
Ormat Technologies. The Olkaria III plant uses air-cooled converters, ensuring that there is no surface discharge. This new technology has the least impact on the environment of any power generated in Kenya. The project will probably qualify for carbon credits under the
Kyoto Protocol's
Clean Development Mechanism. In February 2010 Ormat announced plans to increase the capacity of their plant to as much as 100 MW. In 2005 KenGen was planning to build a fourth plant. An environmental and social impact assessment was approved by the National Environmental Management Authority, including resettlement of some
Maasai communities. In December 2010 the
European Investment Bank recommended providing partial financing for a project to expand Olkaria I and build Olkaria IV, adding 280 MW to its capacity. KenGen estimates that the area has a total potential of 2,000 MW. ==See also==