A consortium including Qatar Electricity and Water Company (QEWC) and Mitsubishi Corporation will build the biggest integrated power and water plant ever constructed in Qatar at a cost of $3.15 billion, QEWC said.

The plant at Umm Al Houl, 20 km south of Doha, will provide 2,520 megawatts (MW) of electricity and 136.5 million gallons per day of water, with the first stage set to be finished in 2017 ahead of full operation in 2018.

Once completed, the plant will boost Qatar’s production capacity of power and water to 11,000 MW and 535 million gallons per day (mgpd) respectively, according to the company.

The $3.15 billion cost will be 85 per cent met by borrowing from local and international banks as well as export credit agencies, with the remainder coming from the sponsors of the project.

QEWC said its contribution to the equity portion would be $252.6 million.

Earlier, local newspaper Gulf Times quoted the president of Qatar General Electricity and Water Corporation (Kahramaa), Issa bin Hilal Al Kuwari, and Fahd Al Mohannadi, general manager of QEWC, as saying the project would help meet Qatar’s rapidly-growing demand for power and water.

Katsuya Nakanishi, general manager at Mitsubishi, was quoted as saying the consortium had signed a 25-year agreement with Kahramaa to purchase the power and water produced by the plant.

QEWC will hold 60 per cent of the project, with Mitsubishi and Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco) holding 30 per cent, the two Japanese companies said.

Tepco, which is struggling financially as it tries to recover from the Fukushima nuclear disaster, will hold only a 1.5 per cent stake in the venture but may raise that to up to 33.3 per cent by the end of September, Mitsubishi and Tepco said.

The remaining 10 per cent will be split equally between Qatar Foundation and Qatar Petroleum.