Chita Power Station
Chita Thermal Power Station | |
---|---|
Location of Chita Thermal Power Station in Japan | |
Country | Japan |
Location | Chita, Aichi |
Coordinates | 34°59′12″N 136°50′37″E / 34.98667°N 136.84361°ECoordinates: 34°59′12″N 136°50′37″E / 34.98667°N 136.84361°E |
Status | Operational |
Commission date | 1966 |
Owner(s) | Chubu Electric Power |
Thermal power station | |
Primary fuel | Natural gas, Fuel Oil |
Combined cycle? | Partial |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 6 |
Nameplate capacity | 3,966 MW |
Chita Thermal Power Station (知多火力発電所 Chita Karyoku Hatsudensho) is a large thermal power station operated by Chubu Electric Power in Chita, Aichi, Japan.[1]
History
Plans to build a power station in Chita were drawn up in the early 1960s, with the first unit coming on line in February 1966. A total of six units were built to power the cities of Aichi Prefecture and Nagoya Metropolis.
Units 1-4 were modernized and converted to be able to burn natural gas in 1985, whereas Units 5-6 were designed for use with natural gas from the start. From 1992-1996, Units 1, 2, 5 and 6 were shut down and were converted into combined cycle plants by adding another gas turbine to the existing boiler-turbine units to reuse exhaust gases.,[2] This gave the plant a total power generating capacity of 3966 MW, which makes it one of the largest in Japan.[3]
Generating Units
Unit 1 Combined-Cycle (operational)
- Rated capacity: 529 MW
- Operational: February 1966
- Fuel: LNG
Unit 2 Combined Cycle (operational)
- Rated capacity: 529 MW
- Fuel: LNG
Unit 3 (operational)
Unit 4 (operational)
- Rated capacity: 700 MW
- Fuel: Heavy Oil, Crude Oil
Unit 5 Combined-Cycle (operational)
- Rated capacity: 854 MW
- Fuel: LNG
Unit 6 Combined-Cycle (operational)
- Rated capacity: 854 MW
- Operational: April 1978
- Fuel: LNG
See also
- Energy in Japan
- List of power stations in Japan
- List of largest power stations in the world
- List of natural gas power stations
References
- ↑ Power stations in Japan
- ↑ Chubu Electric News
- ↑ Major power stations in Japan (PDF), retrieved 2010-03-21