Doicești Power Station
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Doiceşti Power Station | |
---|---|
Country | Romania |
Location | Doicești |
Coordinates | 45°00′10″N 25°23′50″E / 45.0029°N 25.3972°E |
Status | Decommissioned |
Commission date | 1953 |
Owner | Nova Power&Gas |
Power generation | |
Units cancelled | 2 x 250 MW |
Units decommissioned | 6 x 20 MW 2 x 200 MW |
The Doiceşti Power Station was a large thermal power plant located in Doicești, with seven generation groups, six of twenty MW each and two of 200 MW resulting in a total electricity generation capacity of 520 MW.[1] It used Lignite as main fuel supplemented by Natural gas .
The chimney used by the 200 MW units was 208 metres tall. It was demolished to clear the site for the new project using a Small modular reactor. [2]
Operations
[edit]Unit | Commissioned | Capacity(MW) | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Doicești - 1 | 20 | decommissioned | |
Doicești - 2 | 20 | decommissioned | |
Doicești - 3 | 20 | decommissioned | |
Doicești - 4 | 20 | decommissioned | |
Doicești - 5 | 20 | decommissioned | |
Doicești - 6 | 20 | decommissioned | |
Doicești - 7 | 200 | decommissioned | |
Doicești - 8 | - | 200 | decommissioned |
Doicești - 9 | - | 250 | cancelled |
Doicești - 10 | - | 250 | cancelled |
Extension plans
[edit]In 2011 Termoelectrica, the owner of the powerplant, and China Huadian Engineering agreed to build two new units of 250 MW each.[3] The extension was cancelled in 2014 after the dissolution of Termoelectrica.[4]
Doicești location was selected to implement NuScale Power VOYGR-6 model of a nuclear power plant that will deploy six SMRs of 77 MW each with a total capacity of 462 MW. [5][6] For this project Nuclearelectrica formed a new company RoPower, with equal shares with the plant owner Nova Power&Gas. RoPower signed the contract with NuScale Power for phase 1 of front-end engineering and design. [7]
References
[edit]- ^ Centrala Termoelectrica Doiceşti
- ^ "Demolare spectaculoasă la Doicești. În locul turnurilor dinamitate se va construi prima centrală atomică modulară din Europa". Stirileprotv.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 2023-06-05.
- ^ "China, interested in investing in thermal power plant at Doicesti". actmedia.eu. Retrieved 2023-06-05.
- ^ "Investments: Russian tycoon to invest in Romanian coal power plants?". Retrieved 2023-06-05.
- ^ Review, Energy Industry (2022-05-24). "First Small Modular Reactor in Romania to Be Installed in Doicesti". Energy Industry Review. Retrieved 2023-06-05.
- ^ Despa, Oana (2022-06-28). "Prima centrală cu mini reactor nuclear din Europa va fi la Doicești, Dâmbovița. Cum funcționează o centrală SMR". Europa Liberă România (in Romanian). Retrieved 2023-06-05.
- ^ "Doicești - România semnează cu proprietarul american al tehnologiei pentru mini-reactoare". Profit.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 2023-06-05.
External links
[edit]- Description (in Romanian)