Zeran power station
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Part of the Global Gas Plant Tracker, a Global Energy Monitor and Center for Media and Democracy project. |
Zeran power station (Polish: Elektrociepłownia Żerań) is a 601-megawatt (MW) coal-fired heat power station in Warszawa, Poland.
Contents
Location
The undated satellite photo below shows the Zeran Power Station in Warszawa.
Background
The coal plant became operational in 1954. The plant underwent modernization 1997-2001 when it was taken over by Vattenfall, and was later bought by PGNiG.[1]
Plant Details
- Sponsor: Elektrocieplownia Stalowa Wola
- Parent company: PGNiG, Tauron Group
- Location: Stalowa Wola, Podkarpackie, Poland
- Coordinates: 50.553861, 22.079104 (exact)
- Gross capacity (operating): 250 MW
- Unit 9: 386 MW (1954) - subcritical coal
- Unit 10: 15 MW (1954) - subcritical coal
- Unit 11: 100 MW (1965) - subcritical coal
- Unit 12: 100 MW (2009) - subcritical coal
- Gross capacity (construction): 450 MW
- Combined-cycle unit: 450 MW (2020)
Resources and articles
References
- ↑ PGNiG Termika. Our Plants (Polish). PGNiG Termika. Retrieved on 2014-02-18. “PGNiG TERMIKA owns five plants: HP Kawęczyn, CHP Pruszków, CHP Siekierki, CHP Żerań and HP Wola. They produce approximately 401 million GJ of heat which covers 70% of the demand in Warsaw and 60% in Pruszków, Piastów and Michałowice.”