Borsod power station
{{#badges: CoalSwarm|Navbar-Hungaryandcoal}} The The Borsod power station was a 137 MWe power station established in the northeast of Hungary in the early 1950s that fired local brown coal. The plant changed in the 1990s to use imported coal, mainly from Russia, and also biomass, to meet pollution regulations. Owner AES Borsodi Energetikai, the Hungarian arm of U.S. power company AES Corporation, stopped power production at the plant in 2011, which at the time ran mainly on biomass.[1]
AES has planned to develop a new coal fired power plant, comprising two 165 MWe coal-fired units, alongside the existing Borsod Power Plant. Mott MacDonald (MM) was contracted by AES to generate a conceptual plan for the new plant, which would use a blend of local brown coal and imported black coal, and have biomass firing capabilities.[2]
Contents
Articles and Resources
Sources
- ↑ "AES Shuts Two Hungarian Power Plants, an Industrial Info News Alert," Market Wire, April 4, 2011.
- ↑ "Borsod Coal Fired CFB Project, 330 MWe CHP, Hungary," Mott MacDonald website, accessed January 2013.
Related SourceWatch Articles
External Articles
- András Perger, "The role of coal in the Hungarian electricity sector with special attention to the use of lignite," Energy Club, November 2009
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