Iru Power Plant

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iru Power Plant
Iru power plant.jpg
Iru Power Plant
Official nameIru Elektrijaam
CountryEstonia
LocationIru, Maardu
Coordinates59°27′10″N 24°55′39″E / 59.45278°N 24.92750°E / 59.45278; 24.92750Coordinates: 59°27′10″N 24°55′39″E / 59.45278°N 24.92750°E / 59.45278; 24.92750
StatusOperational
Construction began1976 (unit 1)
2010 (unit 3)
Commission date1978 (unit 1)
2013 (unit 3)
Construction cost€105 million (unit 3)
Owner(s)Enefit Green
Operator(s)Enefit Green
Thermal power station
Primary fuelNatural gas (units 1 and 2)
Municipal solid waste (unit 3)
Secondary fuelFuel oil (units 1 and 2)
Cogeneration?Yes
Power generation
Units operational1 × 80 MW
1 × 110 MW
1 × 17 MW
Make and modelLMZ (units 1 and 2)
TMZ (units 1 and 2)
Sibtjazmaz (units 1 and 2)
CNIM (unit 3)
Nameplate capacity207 MW
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Iru Power Plant is a co-generation power plant in Iru village, Maardu, Estonia. It is owned by Enefit Green, a subsidiary of Eesti Energia. The plant has a heating capacity of 698 MWt.[1]

History[]

The first unit of power plant was commissioned in 1978. In the beginning it operated as a boiler plant. In 1980, it was converted into co-generation power plant.

Old units[]

Iru Power Plant (close view)

The power plant has three power units with capacities of 80 MWe, 110 MWe and 17 MWe. The primary fuel of the units 1 and 2 is natural gas and reserve fuel is fuel oil, unit 3 mixed municipal waste. Total installed capacity is 207 MW of electricity, 661.5 MWth of hot water and 162 of MWth steam.[2] In co-generation mode the heating capacity is 398 MWt. It supplies heat to Maardu, and the Lasnamäe and central districts of Tallinn.

Waste-to-energy unit[]

In 2006, Eesti Energia started preparations for construction of a waste incineration unit with capacity of 50 MW of heat and 17 MW of electricity. Construction started in 2010.[3][4][5] It was commissioned on 16 June 2013.[6] The unit processes up to 220,000 tonnes of mixed municipal waste per year. The unit was built and technology was provided by Constructions industrielles de la Méditerranée (CNIM). The general construction was carried out by Merko Ehitus, with the incineration grate supplied by Martin GmbH and the system for the treatment of waste gas by LAB, a subsidiary of CNIM. The unit cost about €105 million.[3][4]

Trivia[]

The director of Iru Power Plant from 2002 to 2004, Kersti Kaljulaid, the first woman to lead a power plant in Estonia, became the fifth President of Estonia in 2016, and the first woman to be President since the country declared independence in 1918.

See also[]

  • Energy in Estonia

References[]

  1. ^ Cornerstone Laid by Eesti Energia and the CNIM Group for the Waste-to-Energy unit at Iru Power Plant
  2. ^ "Other Fossil-Fueled Plants in Estonia". Industcards. 2011-10-31. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  3. ^ a b "Estonian Environment authority grants Iru Power Plant integrated permit". Energija un Pasaule. 2011-10-31. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  4. ^ a b Roman, Steve (2012-06-01). "New Waste-Burning Plant Will 'Reduce Tallinn Heat Bills'". ERR. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  5. ^ Rikken, Kristopher (2011-06-16). "Cornerstone Laid for Revolution in Waste Handling". ERR. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  6. ^ "Eesti Energia Opens Iru Waste-to-Energy Plant". ERR. 2013-06-16. Retrieved 2014-02-16.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""