Shatura Power Station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shatura Power Station
Country Russia
Location Shatura, Moscow Oblast
Coordinates 55°35′00″N 39°33′40″E / 55.58333°N 39.56111°E / 55.58333; 39.56111Coordinates: 55°35′00″N 39°33′40″E / 55.58333°N 39.56111°E / 55.58333; 39.56111
Status Operational
Commission date 1925
Owner(s) OGK-4
Power station
Primary fuel Natural gas (78%)
Secondary fuel Peat (11.5%)
Tertiary fuel Fuel oil (6.8%)
Coal (3.7%)
Generation units 2 × 210 MW
3 × 200 MW
1 × 80 MW
1 × 400 MW
Combined cycle? Yes
Power generation
Installed capacity 1,500 MW

The Shatura Power Station (also called Shaturskaya GRES or GRES-5 locally) is one of the oldest power stations in Russia. The facility is located in Shatura, Moscow Oblast, and generates power by utilizing two 210 MW units, three 200 MW units, and one 80 MW unit, totalling the installed capacity to 1,100 MW.[1] Built in 1925, the power station initially used peat as its fuel source. But later power plant has been diversified into multifuel. In 2010, a new combined cycle block of 400 MW was installed. Two blocks 80 and 400 MW can not work on peat.

Balance of fuel

In 2005 balance of fuel was:

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.