Taiwan Power Company
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Type | 96.92% government, 3.08% public |
---|---|
Industry | Electric power |
Founded | 1 May 1946 |
Headquarters | Taipei City, Republic of China |
Area served | Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, Lienchiang |
Key people |
Hwang Jung-chiou (Chairman) Chu Wen-chen (President)[2] Chen Pu-tsan (Vice President)[3] |
Total assets | TWD 1,629.7 billion |
Employees | 27,261 (2012) |
Website | taipower.com.tw (English) |
The Taiwan Power Company (Chinese: 台灣電力公司; pinyin: Táiwān Diànlì Gōngsī, also known as Taipower) is a state-owned electric power utility providing electric power to Taiwan and off-shore islands of Republic of China. In 1994 a measure which allowed independent power producers (IPP's) to provide up to 20 percent of Taiwan's electricity should have ended the monopoly.[4]
Organization chart
- Committees
- Secretariat
- Department of Corporate Planning
- Department of Generation
- Department of Power Supply
- Department of System Operations
- Department of Business
- Department of Fuels
- Department of Materials
- Department of Finance
- Department of Power Development
- Department of System Planning
- Department of Construction
- Department of Information Management
- Department of Nuclear Generation
- Department of Nuclear Safety
- Department of Nuclear Engineering
- Department of Environmental Protection
- Department of Public Relations
- Department of Industrial Safety and Health
- New Business Development Office
- Department of Accounting
- Department of Human Resources
- Department of Civil Service Ethics
- Legal Affairs Office
- Department of Nuclear and Fossil Power Projects
- Department of Transmission Line and Substation Projects
- Department of Renewable Energy
- Department of Maintenance
- Department of Telecommunications
- Department of Nuclear Back-end Management
- Taiwan Power Research Institute[5]
See also
- Taiwan Power Company F.C.
- Taiwan Power Company Baseball Team
- Taiwan Power Company Volleyball Club
- List of power stations in Taiwan
- Energy in Taiwan
References
- ↑ http://info.taipower.com.tw/TaipowerWeb//upload/files/4/2012e-all.pdf
- ↑ http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2013/05/03/2003561283
- ↑ http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2013/05/15/2003562322
- ↑ "Taiwan, Electric Power" (Web). Energy Information Administration (EIA). August 19, 2005. Retrieved 2006-12-13.
- ↑ http://www.taipower.com.tw/UpFile/AboutUsENFile/2011_org.pdf
External links
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