Neyveli Thermal Power Station
Neyveli Thermal Power Station-I | |
---|---|
Country | India |
Location | Neyveli, Tamil Nadu |
Coordinates | 11°35′34″N 79°28′17″E / 11.59278°N 79.47139°E |
Status | Operational |
Commission date | Unit 1: July 1962 Unit 2: September 1970 |
Operator | Neyveli Lignite Corporation |
Thermal power station | |
Primary fuel | Lignite |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 6 X 50 MW 3 X 100 MW 2 X 210 MW |
Make and model | LMZ Electrosila |
Nameplate capacity | 1020 MW |
Neyveli Thermal Power Station-II | |
---|---|
Country |
|
Coordinates | 11°35′N 79°28′E / 11.59°N 79.47°E{{#coordinates:}}: cannot have more than one primary tag per page |
Status | Operational |
Commission date | Unit 1: March 1986 Unit 2: June 1993 |
Operator | Neyveli Lignite Corporation |
Thermal power station | |
Primary fuel | Lignite |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 7 X 210 MW 2 X 250 MW |
Make and model | Franco Tosi BHEL |
Nameplate capacity | 1970 MW |
Neyveli Thermal Power Station is a set of power plant situated near lignite mines of Neyveli.
It consists of two distinct units (Neyveli Thermal Power Station I and Neyveli Thermal Power Station II) capable of producing 1020 MW and 1,970 MW respectively including their expansion units. It is operated by NLC. The total installed capacity of this station is 2990 MW as of December 2014.
Neyveli Thermal Power Station I
The Neyveli Thermal Power Station I has configuration of 600 MW (6x50-MW units and 3x100-MW units). All these units were commissioned between May 1962 and September 1970. The plant is equipped with boilers from the Taganrog Metallurgical Plant, turbines from LMZ and generators from Electrosila, imported from the Soviet Union under Indo-Soviet assistance programme.[1] It was planned that the Neyveli Thermal Power Station I will be decommissioned between 2011 and 2014; however, in 2011 the period of operations was extended for five years.[2] On May 20, 2014 a High Pressure steam heater, one of the equipments of turbine package burst in a unit of Thermal Power Station I, killed one engineer and injured 5 others. Two out of the 5 died later in hospital unable to survive the wound. Incidentally, it was Neyveli Lignite Corporation's 58th Raising Day.[3]
Two units of 210 MW capacity each were also added under Stage I expansion which are under commercial operation.
Neyveli Thermal Power Station II
The 1470 MW (7x210 MW) Neyveli Thermal Power Station II was built in two stages. At the first stage between March 1986 and March 1988 three units with capacity of 210 MW each were commissioned. Boilers were supplied by Ganz-Danubius and generators were supplied by Franco Tosi. At the second stage from March 1991 to June 1993 four units with the same capacity, supplied by Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited, were added.
Under Stage II expansion, two units of 250 MW each were installed by BHEL. These units use circulating fluidised bed combustion(CFBC) boilers. These two units commissioned one year back are facing teething problems and rarely generate electricity.[4]
See also
References
- ^ "Coal-Fired Plants in Tamil Nadu". Industcards. Retrieved 2012-12-22.
- ^ "Decommissioning of Thermal Power Station I at NLC deferred". The Economic Times. 2011-12-21. Retrieved 2012-12-22.
- ^ "One killed, six injured in NLC steam pipeline burst". The Hindu. 2014-05-20. Retrieved 2014-05-21.
- ^ "Performance Status of lignite power stations in India" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 January 2015. Retrieved 13 January 2015.