Ișalnița Power Station
The Işalniţa Power Station is a thermal power plant located in Işalniţa, Dolj County operating with one generating unit of 315 MW.
The tallest chimney of the power station is 200 metres tall.
Future extensions
A consortium formed by Alstom, Sumitomo and IHI Corporation was commissioned to upgrade the 315 MW group to 345 MW each at a total cost of US$315 million.[1]
There were plans to add another generating group of 500 MW at Işalniţa Power Station[2] at a cost of US$750 million. The plans were later canceled.
There are plans with Alro Slatina for construction of a new unit of 850 MW that will use natural gas as fuel.[3]
Operations
The recovery and resilience plan for Romania included decommisioning of Unit 8, which was achieved in 2021.[4]
Unit 7 stopped production from January 1, 2024 and was put in reserve, according with Complex Energetic Oltenia's plan to restructure the company. [1] It will be in reserve until the end of 2025, after which it will be decommissioned.[5]
Unit | Capacity (MW) | Commissioned | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Ișalnița - 1 | 50 | decommissioned | |
Ișalnița - 2 | 50 | decommissioned | |
Ișalnița - 3 | 50 | decommissioned | |
Ișalnița - 4 | 55 | decommissioned | |
Ișalnița - 5 | 100 | decommissioned | |
Ișalnița - 6 | 100 | decommissioned | |
Ișalnița - 7 | 315 | mothballed | |
Ișalnița - 8 | 315 | decommissioned |
References
- ^ MEC vrea 14 milioane de euro in plus la Isalnita (in Romanian)
- ^ CE Craiova vrea o noua termocentrala
- ^ "Alro va construi o centrală electrică pe gaze de la Ișalnița împreună cu CE Oltenia". Economica.net (in Romanian). 2022-10-13. Retrieved 2023-06-03.
- ^ "MIHAI WEBER (PSD): "Solicit ministrului Energiei regândirea planului de renunţare la cărbune"". www.bursa.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 2023-06-03.
- ^ "Ultimul grup al termocentralei Ișalnița a fost oprit la 1 ianuarie. "Se respectă la virgulă programul de închidere, dar punerea în funcțiune a instalațiilor noi e mult întârziată"". Economica.net (in Romanian). 2024-01-03. Retrieved 2024-01-03.
- v
- t
- e
Coal and oil |
|
---|
Natural gas |
|
---|
- Iron Gate I - 1,168 MW
- Tarnița – Lăpuștești - 1,000 MW
- Iron Gate II - 591 MW
- Lotru-Ciunget - 510 MW
- Râul Mare - 335 MW
- Mărișelu - 221 MW
- Vidraru - 220 MW
- Bicaz-Stejaru - 210 MW
- Ruieni - 153 MW
- Nehoiașu - 152 MW
- Oașa - 150 MW
- Șugag - 150 MW
- Remeți - 146 MW
- Brădișor - 115 MW
- Tismana - 106 MW
- Cernavodă Nuclear Power Plant - 1,300 MW
- Sinus Holding - 700 MW
- Fântânele-Cogealac - 600 MW
- Blackstone - 500 MW
- Deleni - 500 MW
- Eolica Cogealac - 448 MW
- Mărişelu - 300 MW
- Eolica Săcele - 252 MW
- Eolica Casimcea - 244 MW
- Văcăreni - 240 MW
- Verbund Casimcea - 225 MW
- Green Energy - 200 MW
- Pechea - 150 MW
- Sabloal Valea Dacilor - 147 MW
- EDP Cernavodă - 138 MW
- Eolica Beidaud - 128 MW
- Eolica Baia - 126 MW
- Eolica Sarichioi - 102 MW
- Gheorgheni - 100 MW
- Arad 1 - 1044 MW
- CEF Nadab 1 - 363 MW
- CEF Nadab 2 - 302 MW
- CEF Bucșsani - 221 MW
- CEF Corbii Mari - 217 MW
- CEF Iepurești - 165 MW
- Rătești - 155 MW
- CEF Vadeni 1 - 145 MW
- CEF Vadeni 2 - 145 MW
- CEF Calugăreni 2 - 121 MW
- CEF Dobra - 117 MW
- CEF Vacarești - 108 MW
This article about a power station is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article about a Romanian building or structure is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e