Nordjylland Power Station
Nordjylland Power Station | |
---|---|
Official name | Nordjyllandsværket |
Country | Denmark |
Location | Vodskov |
Coordinates | 57°04′29.9″N 10°02′21.8″E / 57.074972°N 10.039389°E |
Status | Operational |
Commission date | 1967 |
Owner | Aalborg Kommune |
Operator | Aalborg Forsyning |
Thermal power station | |
Primary fuel | Coal |
Turbine technology | Steam turbine |
Cooling source | Salt sea water from the fjord |
Cogeneration? | Yes |
Thermal capacity | 422 MW[1] |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 1 × 25 MW Unit 3: 385 MW |
Units decommissioned | 2 |
Nameplate capacity | 385 MW[1] |
Annual net output | Unit 3: 719 GWh electric and 3345 TJ district heating (2023)[2] |
External links | |
Commons | Related media on Commons |
Nordjylland Power Station (Danish: Nordjyllandsværket) is a coal-fired combined heat and power plant in Vodskov, 17 kilometres (11 mi) north-east of Aalborg, Denmark. It is operated by the municipality Aalborg Kommune.
History
[edit]The first unit at the site became operational in 1967, under the association "I/S Nordjyllands Elektricitetsforsyning".[3][4] Its original name from the opening was "Vendsysselværket", and build to burn oil from the start, but prepared for reconstruction to also burn coal.[4]
The power plant have had 3 coal fired boilers and a gas turbine. The gas turbine has an output of 25 MW and entered service in 1977, while unit 2, which went also in 1977 has a maximum production capacity of electricity of 305 MW and heat of 42 MJ/s.[citation needed] Unit 3, which entered service in 1998, has a maximum production capacity of 411 MW and a maximum heat production capacity of 490 MJ/s.[citation needed] It uses a 170.1 metres (558 ft) tall flue gas stack, while Units 1 and 2 and the gas turbine use 112.17 metres (368.0 ft) tall stacks. Unit 3 was the first power plant in Denmark with a SNOX-system for exhaust cleaning.
The produced heat is used for district heating of Aalborg.
An electric boiler for district heating was inaugurated in January 2018.[5][6] It can convert 35 MW from electricity to heated water, and can act as an back-up heating source for the district heating system. This electric boiler was envisioned in 2017 to replace some of the use of methane gas and oil for the district heatings backup needs, and sell regulations services for the electricity market.[7]
Plant owner Aalborg Forsyning has said the power plant will stop using coal in 2028.[8]
Units
[edit]Commission | Fuel | Electric capacity [MW] | Heat capacity [MW] | Decommission | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unit 1 | 9 January 1967[9]: 3 | Fuel oil[9]: 3 | 140[9]: 3 | 1996[9]: 3 | |
1982[9]: 4 | Coal[9]: 4 | ||||
Unit 2 | 31 March 1977[9]: 4 | Fuel oil[9]: 3 | 300[9]: 4 | 42[citation needed] | 2014[10]: 30 |
22 April 1987[9]: 4 | Coal[9]: 4 | ||||
Unit 3 | 14 September 1998[1][9]: 5 | Coal | 385[1] | 422[1] | Active Planned 2028[8] |
Power lines
[edit]While two power lines leave the station eastward to the famous Vester Hassing Static Inverter Plant, where HVDC Konti-Skan starts, two other 380-kV lines cross Limfjord just east of the power plant in two spans. The towers of the westernmost of these spans are 101.2 metres (332 ft) tall and cross Limfjord in a 723 metres (2,372 ft) long span, while that of the easternmost span are 141.7 metres (465 ft) tall and cross Limfjord in a 797 metres (2,615 ft) long span. Latter towers are the tallest electricity pylons in Denmark. Their considerable height results from the fact that they are equipped with a further crossbar for a 110-kV circuit.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Stamdata hovedbrændsel og brændselsfordeling (anlæg) (Report) (in Danish). Energistyrelsen. 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
- ^ Nordjyllandsværket A/S (29 May 2024). "Årsrapport 2023" (in Danish).
- ^ "History". Aalborg Forsyning. Retrieved 14 November 2019.[dead link]
- ^ a b "Newspaper article published 1967-04-28: "Vendsyssel selvforsynende med elektricitet"". Republished by 'Teknologiens Mediehus'. Originally published by 'Ingeniør- og Bygningsvæsen'. 1967-04-28. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
- ^ "Aalborg Energikoncern indvier 35 MW elkedel". Energy Supply DK. 2018-01-22. Retrieved 2019-11-14.
- ^ "Newspaper article titled "Kæmpe el-kedel klar til brug"". www.nordjyske.dk (in Danish). 2018-01-19. Retrieved 2019-11-14.
- ^ "Press release titled "Aalborg Energikoncern får elkedel"" (PDF). Aalborg Forsyning. 2017-08-16. Retrieved 2019-11-14.
- ^ a b Hansen, Frederik Marcher (3 September 2024). "Danmark vinker farvel: Kul reddede os fra kriser og udløste et 'økonomisk big bang'" [Denmark waves goodbye: Coal saved us from crises and triggered a 'economic big bang']. Ingenøren (in Danish). Retrieved 21 October 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Thomsen, Klem (May 2021) [December 2011]. "Nordjyllandsværket" (PDF). Fra Kjær Herred. Historisk Samfund for Himmerland og Kjær Herred. Retrieved 21 October 2024 – via Hals Arkiv.
- ^ "Strategiplan 2016-2019 for Aalborg Forsyning, Varme" [Strategy plan 2016-2019 for Aalborg Utility, Heating] (PDF) (in Danish). Miljø- og Energiforvaltningen, Aalborg Forsyning, Varme. June 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 November 2018.