Scholven power station
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Scholven power station is a 740-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power station in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Additionally, the power station is the site of the 76 MW Buer power station.
Units D-F totaling 1,480 MW were retired in 2014. Units B-C are planned for closure in 2022 and will initially be replaced with a 114 MW gas turbine.
Contents
Location
The undated satellite below shows the plant in Gelsenkirchen.
Background
The mine-mouth plant began operating as a 50 MW plant in 1930, but was largely destroyed by a large number of bombing raids during World War II. Power generation resumed in 1955. From 1968 to 1975, the coal-fired Blocks B to E (370 MW each) and oil-fired blocks G and H were commissioned. In 1979 Block F, with 740 MW, was commissioned. In 1985 Buer district heating power plant of 76 MW net output was commissioned at the power station. In 2001-2003, the oil-fired units were decommissioned, and demolished in 2009.[1][2]
Coal-fired units D-F totaling 1,480 MW were retired in 2014.[3]
Gas-fired capacity
In August 2018 Uniper said it plans to build new gas-fired units to replace the two remaining Scholven coal units, units B-C totaling 640 MW. The gas units are intended to initially supplement the coal units but fully replace them by 2022 with the power supplied to a nearby industrial customer.[4]
As part of the plan, Uniper has teamed up with German chemicals company Evonik to build a 15 km (10 mile) gas pipeline to connect Scholven to the network of Open Grid Europe.[5]
The new Scholven plant will consist of a 114 MWe/140 MWt natural-gas-fuelled twin-gas-turbine CHP facility, due for completion in 2022. Uniper says it intends to eventually replace the existing elderly coal-fired units at the site with gas-fuelled capacity.[6]
Proposed coal expansion
In 2008, an 1100 MW expansion of the power station was proposed by E.ON Kraftwerke, with a notional commissioning date of 2014/15. In 2008 the project was designated by Power in Europe as being at the "pre-proposal" level. The newsletter noted that "reports surface of a further new coal plant project for E.ON, perhaps at this existing generation site."[7]
The new coal-fired unit at Scholven was never built.
Project Details of gas unit
- Sponsor: E.On Kraftwerke GmbH
- Parent company: E.ON
- Location: Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
- Coordinates: 51.60064, 7.004609 (exact)
- Gross capacity (proposed): 114 MW
- Turbine unit: 114 MW (2022)
Plant Details of coal units
- Sponsor: E.On Kraftwerke GmbH
- Parent company: E.ON
- Developer:
- Location: Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
- Coordinates: 51.60064, 7.004609 (exact)
- Status: Operating (Units B&C), Retired (Units D-F)
- Capacity: 740 MW (Units B&C: 370 MW); Buer: 76 MW
- Retired Capacity: 1,480 MW (Units D&E: 370 MW, Unit F: 740 MW)
- Start date: 1968-71 (Units B-E), 1979 (Unit F), Buer (1985)
- Type: Subcritical (Units B-E, Buer), Supercritical (Unit F)
- Coal Type: Bituminous
- Coal Source: Scholven colliery
- Source of financing:
Articles and Resources
Sources
- ↑ "Scholven power plant," E.ON, accessed April 2016
- ↑ "Coal-Fired Plants in Nordrhein-Westfalen," Industcards, accessed April 2016
- ↑ "2015 first quarter results," E.ON, 07 May 2015
- ↑ "Uniper's power generation H1 earnings rise, plans coal-to-gas conversion," Platts, Aug 7, 2018
- ↑ "Vattenfall looks to gas and biomass as end of coal power looms," Reuters, Oct 29, 2018
- ↑ "Gas new build for CHP and grid support," Modern Power Systems, 18 June 2019
- ↑ "PiE’s new power plant project tracker – April 2008", Power in Europe, Issue 523, April 7, 2008, page 23.