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Sri Lanka Colombo Electric Energy Exhibition LANKAENERGY

The Sri Lanka Electric Energy Exhibition is hosted by the famous exhibition company AMB. AMB was founded in 1996 and is headquartered in Malaysia. With offices in Singapore, Cambodia, Philippines, Myanmar and Vietnam, the business involves electricity, energy, water treatment, oil and gas, hotels, food, construction and infrastructure, etc., with more than 20 years of exhibition experience. The exhibition is held once a year in Colombo, Sri Lanka, together with the Cambodia Water Treatment Exhibition and the Cambodia Building Materials Exhibition. In 2016, the exhibition attracted 200 exhibitors from China, Sri Lanka, Singapore, Myanmar, Malaysia, Taiwan, India and other countries and regions, covering the main aspects of infrastructure. The 2017 Sri Lanka Electric Energy Exhibition will be held in the capital city of Colombo from August 10-12.

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Market analysis
Sri Lanka’s electricity energy demand will increase to 15,000 kTOE by 2020, and the growth rate of these two major sectors has reached 7-8% according to statistics from the electric power and petroleum sectors. Sri Lanka only has large-scale hydropower and natural bio-powered energy resources. In the future, energy demand will increase imported fossil energy in the medium period. In the long run, the feasibility of the development of local petroleum resources, the accelerated development of non-traditional renewable energy and the mixed use of primary energy resources will undergo disruptive changes in Sri Lanka. In Sri Lanka, hydropower is the earliest and most primitive power generation technology. In December 2012, hydropower accounted for 48% of the total data grid capacity and 27.9% of the total electricity. At present, ten major hydropower stations are under implementation. The only water source is the Victoria Dam. The government will continue to issue private licenses for small hydropower development with a total installed capacity of 10MW per project. Thermal power plants are Sri Lanka¡¯s largest source of energy, accounting for 54% of the total effective power in December 2010. Sri Lanka’s thermal power station uses diesel, natural gas and other fuels to operate. Norocholai Coal Power Plant is the only coal power plant in Sri Lanka to be commissioned in 2011, adding 300 MW of power supply capacity. It is currently planned to add another 600 megawatts of electricity within the next five-year plan. The second coal power plant “Ambur Coal Power Plant” is under construction and will be built in Trincomalee Hambantota Wind Farm is Sri Lanka’s first and only wind power plant. The power plant is located in Hambanto. On the southeast coast of the tower, there are 5 Macon M1500-600 wind turbines with a power generation capacity of 600KW. The total output power is 3 MW, and the annual output of the power plant is nearly 4500MWh.

Range of exhibition
Power generation equipment, power transmission and distribution equipment & power generation engineering: automation equipment, busbars & cables, connectors, control systems/control equipment, electrical appliances & electronic accessories, power engineering, electrical equipment installation, energy saving/renewable energy technology, instrumentation, lighting Equipment/system/control, equipment maintenance/repair, power generation equipment & service, process control equipment, safety assurance system, software, switch system, test/measurement system, transformer, transmission & distribution system, wire & pipe system

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