Sri Damodaram Sanjeevaiah Thermal Power Station

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{{#badges: CoalSwarm|Navbar-Indiacoal}} Damodaram Sanjeevaiah Thermal Power Station is a power station in Andhra Pradesh, India.

Location

The map below shows Nelaturu village, Nellore district, the approximate location where the plant will be built.

Background

Damodaram Sanjeevaiah Thermal Power Station is a 2400 MW coal plant under various stages of construction in the state of Andhra Pradhesh, India. It was envisioned for 1600 MW (2X 800 MW), but a terms of reference for an additional 800 MW was granted in 2012.[1]

The project will use Supercritical boilers. It is sponsored by Andhra Pradesh Power Generation Corporation (APGENCO) and is categorized as a Mega Power Project, enabling to proceed on a fast-track basis. It is designed for a mixture of 70% domestic coal and 30% imported coal. Sea water will be used for cooling. Krishnapatnam Port (5 km) will be used for importing coal.[2]

The Power station is designed for blended coal in the ratio of 70% washed domestic coal from Talcher Coalfield to 30% imported coal. Sea water is proposed for cooling purpose and potable water by desalination. Krishnapatnam port (about 5 km from site) will cater to the requirement of importing heavy machinery and both domestic & imported coal of 3.5 and 1.5 million tons per annum respectively. EPC contract for the main plant has been awarded to Tata Projects Limited during July,2008 and for BOP during February 2009. The estimated complete cost of project is about Rs 8432/- Crores. The Debt & Equity ratio is 80:20 and Project is being financed by PFC and KfW, Germany.[3]

Unit 1 went into operation in March 2014. The second unit is expected to be commissioned by July 2014.[4]

Expansion to 4000 MW Cancelled

The government halted plans for APGenco to expand its Damodaram Sanjeevaiah Thermal Power Station at Krishnapatnam in Nellore district, Andhra Pradesh. The plant size was expected to increase in size from 1,600 MW to 4,000 MW, cleared by government officials July 17, 2008. The government instead reallocated the land to Andhra Pradesh Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (APIIC) for onward transfer to Thermal Powertech Corporation. "It looks as though the state government came under sudden political pressure on behalf of Powertech because of which the expansion plans of a great performer like Genco was thrown to the winds and the land given to the private company," former Union power secretary E A S Sarma told the Times of India. Thermal Powertech had initially been allotted land in Machilipatnam in a prohibited coastal regulatory zone (CRZ) for its thermal plant. However, environmentalists were alarmed that the proposed site was a breeding ground for rare birds. In response, the government denied environmental clearance for the site. The land was reallocated to APIIC just weeks after the environmental clearance for the Thermal Powertech Corporation's Machilipatnam plant.[5]

Citizen opposition

According to reports, "Villagers of Nelaturu and Painapuram and surrounding habitations (where the plant is to be built) staged a protest in December 2011." The locals demanded "payment of suitable compensation to the land acquired for construction of the power plant, besides job security for workers, a hospital and an ITI and other resources in the village."[6]

Project Details

Sponsor: Andhra Pradesh Power Generation Corporation (APGENCO)
Location: Nelaturu village, Nellore district, Andhra Pradesh
Coordinates: 14.288601, 80.124848 (approximate)
Status:

  • Unit 1: Operating
  • Unit 2: Operating
  • Unit 3: Pre-permit development

Nameplate capacity:

  • Unit 1: 800 MW
  • Unit 2: 800 MW
  • Unit 3: 800 MW

Type: Supercritical
Projected in service:

  • Unit 1: 2014
  • Unit 2: 2014
  • Unit 3:

Coal Type:
Coal Source: 70% washed domestic coal from Talcher Coalfield to 30% imported coal.
Estimated annual CO2:
Source of financing: 80% debt / 20% equity - financed by PFC and KfW, Germany[2]
Permits: Terms of Reference, Unit 3, India MoEF, Sep 26, 2012.

Articles and resources

References

  1. Terms of Reference, MoEF, Sep 26, 2012.
  2. Jump up to: 2.0 2.1 "Projects," APGENCO, accessed February 2012
  3. "Nelatur power plant 1st unit to be ready by 2013", The Hindu (10 February 2012). Retrieved on 4 September 2012. 
  4. "800-MW unit-I of AP Genco’s Krishnapatnam plant goes on stream," The Hindu, April 1, 2014.
  5. Jinka Nagaraju, "YSR nips expansion plans of Krishnapatnam power plant," The Times of India, February 19, 2009.
  6. "Damodaram Sanjeevaiah Thermal Power Station, Andhra Pradesh, India" Environmental Justice Atlas, accessed April 21, 2014.

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External resources

External articles

Wikipedia also has an article on Sri Damodaram Sanjeevaiah Thermal Power Station. This article may use content from the Wikipedia article under the terms of the GFDL.