Beilun power plant
Beilun power plant | |||
---|---|---|---|
location | |||
|
|||
Coordinates | 29 ° 56 '35 " N , 121 ° 48' 57" E | ||
country | People's Republic of China | ||
Waters | East China Sea (cooling with sea water) | ||
Data | |||
Type | Thermal power plant | ||
Primary energy | Fossil energy | ||
fuel | Hard coal | ||
power | 5 GW | ||
owner | China Guodian Corporation (CGC) | ||
operator | CGC | ||
Start of operations | 1993 | ||
Energy fed in per year | 27,500 GWh |
The Beilun Power Plant is a coal-fired power plant in China located on the East China Sea in the Beilun District of Ningbo City .
The power plant is owned by the Guodian Zhejiang Beilun Power Generation Company (GZB), a subsidiary of the China Guodian Corporation, and is also operated by GZB.
Data
With an installed capacity of 5 GW , Beilun is one of the most powerful coal-fired power plants in the world and serves to cover the base load . The planned annual generation is 27.5 billion kWh . The electricity generated is carried off via two 500 kV lines.
Power plant units
The power plant consists of a total of seven units with different capacities that went into operation from 1993 to 2009. The following table gives an overview:
block | Max. Power (MW) | Start of operation | turbine | generator | Steam boiler |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 600 | 1993 | GEC-Alsthom | GEC-Alsthom | Babcock & Wilcox |
2 | 600 | 1994 | GEC-Alsthom | GEC-Alsthom | Babcock & Wilcox |
3 | 600 | 2000 | Toshiba | Toshiba | IHI |
4th | 600 | 2000 | Toshiba | Toshiba | IHI |
5 | 600 | 2001 | Toshiba | Toshiba | IHI |
6th | 1,000 | 2009 | Shanghai Electric | Shanghai Electric | Dongfang |
7th | 1,000 | 2009 | Shanghai Electric | Shanghai Electric | Dongfang |
The costs for blocks 3 through 5 were approximately USD 1.8 billion . Blocks 6 and 7 use supercritical steam generators (see supercritical water ).
Others
The English newspaper The Telegraph ranked Beilun in 2007 with 26 million t in 15th place of the 25 largest CO 2 emitters worldwide.
See also
Web links
- Coal-Fired Plants in China - Zhejiang. Power Plants Around the World, accessed May 27, 2016 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c 'Giga' projects - the world's biggest thermal power plants. Power Technology, November 27, 2013, accessed May 27, 2016 .
- ↑ Guodian Beilun Coal Power Plant China. Global Energy Observatory, accessed May 27, 2016 .
- ↑ Beilungang Coal-Fired, China. Power Technology, accessed May 27, 2016 .
- ↑ 25 dirtiest power stations in the world. The Telegraph , November 14, 2007, accessed May 27, 2016 .