Beilun power plant

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Beilun power plant
location
Beilun power plant (China)
Beilun power plant
Coordinates 29 ° 56 '35 "  N , 121 ° 48' 57"  E Coordinates: 29 ° 56 '35 "  N , 121 ° 48' 57"  E
country China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China 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
f2

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

Individual evidence

  1. a b c 'Giga' projects - the world's biggest thermal power plants. Power Technology, November 27, 2013, accessed May 27, 2016 .
  2. Guodian Beilun Coal Power Plant China. Global Energy Observatory, accessed May 27, 2016 .
  3. Beilungang Coal-Fired, China. Power Technology, accessed May 27, 2016 .
  4. 25 dirtiest power stations in the world. The Telegraph , November 14, 2007, accessed May 27, 2016 .