Qingtongxia Aluminum Works power station
{{#badges:CoalSwarm|Navbar-Chinacoal}}Qingtongxia Aluminum Works power station is a 660-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China. An additional 2,100 MW was proposed.
Contents
Location
The undated satellite photo below shows the plant West of Railway Station in Qingtongxia, Wuzhong.
Background on Project
Qingtongxia Aluminum Works power station is a 2 x 330 MW coal plant in Qingtongxia, which was originally owned by Ningxia Energy Aluminum of China Power Investment (CPI).[1]
Expansion
CPI is planning to build a two-unit 2,100 MW expansion of the plant. The feasibility report was submitted in 2014.[2]
With no developments since 2014, the project appears to be abandoned.
Ownership
In July 2015, China Power Investment Corporation (CPI) and State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation (SNPTC) merged to become State Power Investment Corporation (国家电力投资集团), one of the five largest state-owned electricity producers in the People's Republic of China.[3]
Plant Details
- Sponsor: State Power Investment Corporation (76%), Ningxia Power Investment Group (24%)
- Location: West of Railway Station, Qingtongxia, Wuzhong, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China
- Coordinates: 37.923789, 105.911304 (exact)
- Status: Operating
- Gross capacity: 660 MW (Units 1 & 2: 330 MW)
- Type: Ultra-supercritical
- In service: 2010
- Coal type: Bituminous
- Coal source:
- Source of financing:
Project Details of expansion
- Sponsor: State Power Investment Corporation (76%), Ningxia Power Investment Group (24%)
- Location: West of Railway Station, Qingtongxia, Wuzhong, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China
- Coordinates: 38.1, 106.333333 (approximate)
- Status: Cancelled
- Gross capacity: 2,100 MW (Units 3 & 4: 1,050 MW)
- Type: Ultra-supercritical
- Projected in service:
- Coal type: Bituminous
- Coal source:
- Source of financing:
Articles and resources
References
- ↑ "电力产业," SPIC, accessed Oct 2016
- ↑ "中电投宁夏能源铝业公司积家井电厂一期工程初步可研报告通过审查," 青铜峡能源铝业, 2013/4/3
- ↑ "Chinese nuclear giant officially launched", World Nuclear Association (16 July 2015). Retrieved on 4 May 2015.