Shin-Nagoya Thermal Power Station

Shin-Nagoya Thermal Power Station (新名古屋火力発電所, Shin-Nagoya Karyoku Hatsudensho) is a thermal power station operated by JERA in the Minato Ward of the city of Nagoya. Aichi Prefecture. Japan. The facility is located at the northern end of Chita Peninsula.[1]

Shin-Nagoya Thermal Power Station
新名古屋火力発電所
Shin-Nagoya Thermal Power Station Unit 7
Map
CountryJapan
LocationMinato-ku, Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture
Coordinates35°3′50.56″N 136°52′36.97″E / 35.0640444°N 136.8769361°E / 35.0640444; 136.8769361
StatusOperational
Commission date1959
Owner(s)
Operator(s)JERA
Thermal power station
Primary fuelLNG
Site area426,111 sq.m.
Power generation
Units operational2
Units decommissioned6
Nameplate capacity3058 MW
External links
WebsiteOfficial website

History edit

The Shin-Nagoya Thermal power Station is the only power plant located within the city limits of Nagoya, and provides much of the city's electricity for ordinary homes. Unit 1 started operation as a coal-fired power plant in 1959, and Units 2 through 6 were built by 1964, reaching a total output of 12,560 MW, making it the largest power plant in Asia at that time. All six units were converted from coal to heavy oil in 1972. Units 1 through 4 were abolished in 1992 as their equipment reach the end of is operational life, as were Units 5 and 6 in 2002. Unit 7 was completed in 1996 as an Advanced Combined Cycle system (ACC) using LNG as fuel with a 1300 deg C combustion temperature, driving six gas and six steam turbines. Unit 8 was built between 2005 and 2008 as a More Advanced Combined Cycle system (MACC) using LNG as fuel with a 1500 deg C combustion temperature, driving four gas turbines and four steam turbines.[2]

In April 2019, all thermal power plant operations of Chubu Electric Power were transferred to JERA, a joint venture between Chubu Electric and TEPCO Fuel & Power, Inc, a subsidiary of Tokyo Electric Power Company.

Plant details edit

Unit Fuel Type Capacity On line Status
1 Coal (to 1972); Heavy Oil Steam turbine 156 MW 1959 Scrapped 1992
2 Coal (to 1972); Heavy Oil Steam turbine 220 MW 1961 Scrapped 1992
3 Coal (to 1972); Heavy Oil Steam turbine 220 MW 1962 Scrapped 1992
4 Coal (to 1972); Heavy Oil Steam turbine 220 MW 1963 Scrapped 1992
5 Coal (to 1972); Heavy Oil Steam turbine 220 MW 1963 Scrapped 1992
6 Coal (to 1972); Heavy Oil Steam turbine 220 MW 1964 Scrapped 1992
7 Natural Gas ACC 1458 MW Dec 1998 operational
8 Natural Gas MACC 1600 MW 2008 operational

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ FEPC. "Principal Thermal Power Plants (1,000MW or greater)". The Federation of Electric Power Companies of Japan. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  2. ^ Chubu Electric press release

External links edit