Salten Kraftsamband
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Salten Kraftsamband AS | |
---|---|
Type | Private |
Founded | 1956 |
Headquarters | Fauske, Norway |
Area served | Salten |
Industry | Power |
Products | Hydroelectricity |
Employees | 150 (2007) |
Website | www.sks.no |
Salten Kraftsamband or SKS is a Norwegian power company that operates eight hydroelectric power stations with annual production of 1,770 GWh. Since 1997 the company has also sold power to end-users. Head offices are located in Fauske.
The company is owned by the City of Bodø (47.72%), DONG Energy (20.35%), Municipality of Fauske (12.83%), Nordkraft (8.86%), Sjøfossen Energi (6.92%) and Skjerstad Kraftlag (3.32%). DONG Energy bought its ownership from Elkem and Meløy Energi while Narvik Energi bought it from Skjerstad Kraftlag and the Municipality of Sørfold.
[edit] Operations
Salten Kraftsamband operates Daja, Fagerli, Lomi and Sjønstå power stations in Sulitjelma and Forså, Langvann, Sundsfjord and Oldereid power stations in Salten. It also owns 58% of Rødøy-Lurøy Kraftverk and 60% of Nord-Norsk Vindkraft and part of Fauske Lysverk.
[edit] History
SKS was founded in 1956 by the municipalities of Bodø, Bodin and Fauske to create a power grid from the power stations in Sulitjelma to Outer Salten where the largest population was located. The municipalities had cooperates in building the power plants, but needed a separate company to transport the electricity. In the end of the 50s SKS built the Deja station. Still, the current structure of the company arose in 1975 with a merger of Salten Kraftlag. In the 1980s there was major work on creating a vertical integrated power company for all of Salten, and in the long term a county municipality owned company for all of Nordland. But local fluctuation and concern for every petty local job made a consolidation impossible. In 1991 the new energy law was passed, killing the process. In 2000 SKS tried to merge with Bodø Energi and Fauske Lysverk, but the fusion failed.