Shatura Power Station
Peat-fired power station in Shatura, Moscow Oblast, Russia
Coal (3.7%)[citation needed]
3 × 200 MW
1 × 80 MW
1 × 400 MW
[edit on Wikidata]
The Shatura Power Station (Russian: Шату́рская ГРЭС, romanized: Shaturskaya GRES, or GRES-5 locally) is one of the oldest power stations in Russia.[1] The facility is located in Shatura, Moscow Oblast, and generates power by utilizing two 210 MW units, three 200 MW units, and one 80 MW unit, for a total capacity of 1.1 GW.[2][failed verification] Built in 1925, the power station initially used peat as its fuel source.[3] Later on, the power plant was diversified into multifuel. In 2010, a new combined cycle block of 400 MW was installed.[4] The 80 and 400 MW blocks can not work on peat.
Balance of fuel
In 2005 the fuel use was:[citation needed]
- Natural gas: 78%
- Peat: 11.5%
- Fuel oil: 6.8%
- Coal: 3.7%
See also
- List of fuel oil power stations
- List of largest power stations in the world
- List of power stations in Russia
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shatura Steam Power Plant.
- ^ International, Power Engineering (2012-09-01). "Shatura sets a new efficiency standard in Russia". Power Engineering International. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
- ^ Shatura Power Station
- ^ "Towards climate-responsible peatlands management" (PDF).
- ^ "Investments - Unipro". www.unipro.energy. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
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