Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Viborg Power Station

Coordinates: 56°28′25.88″N 9°24′54.4″E / 56.4738556°N 9.415111°E / 56.4738556; 9.415111
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Viborg Power Station
Viborg Power Station, July 2014. (Photo: Kim Hansen)
Map
CountryDenmark
LocationViborg
Coordinates56°28′25.88″N 9°24′54.4″E / 56.4738556°N 9.415111°E / 56.4738556; 9.415111
StatusOperational
Commission date1996
OwnerEnergi Viborg
Thermal power station
Primary fuelNatural gas
Combined cycle?Yes
Cogeneration?Yes
Power generation
Nameplate capacity57 MW
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Viborg Power Station (Danish: Viborg Kraftvarmeværk) is a natural gas-fired power station operated by Energi Viborg in Viborg, Denmark.

It can provide 57 MW of electric power from a General Electric Frame 6 gas turbine and a W.H.Allen steam turbine, and 57 MJ/s of district heating. It is used about 5,000 hours per year. The hot water tank contains 19,000 m3, suitable for 15 hours of cold weather consumption.[1]

The station is to be used as a hub for distributing district heating from the coming Apple data center near Foulum and Tjele. Consultants calculate that the best economy for Viborg's district heating is a system where Apple's cooling water is used to provide heat for 7 MWe heat pumps at the data center delivering 55 MJ/s of heating (and cooling for Apple), with an overall Coefficient of performance of 8. The transmission water temperature is raised from 30 to 50 °C and then pipelined 10 km to Viborg, where further heat pumps raise (and keep) the local heat to 60 °C. The start cost is estimated at DKK 316 million,[2] and running costs of DKK 265/MWh, compared to the 2017 price of DKK 413/MWh and natural gas at over DKK 500/MWh. Conversely, Apple's cooling water is lowered in temperature by the heat pumps. Viborg's expected heat demand is between 10 MJ/s in summer and 90 MJ/s (peak) in winter, for an annual consumption of 307 GWh. The heating difference between the 55 MJ/s heat from Apple and the 90 MJ/s peak demand is covered by gas boilers.[3]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Facts about the plant Archived April 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Energi Viborg. Accessed: 6 December 2011.
  2. ^ Pedersen, Maria Berg Badstue (7 June 2017). "Det koster 316 millioner at udnytte varmen fra Apple". Energy Supply DK. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  3. ^ "Analyse af balanceret fjernvarme" (PDF). NIRAS. May 2017. pp. 1+2, 13+14, 17, 22+23, 37, 44. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
[edit]