Émile-Huchet Explained

Émile-Huchet is a thermal power plant, in Moselle department, France.

History

It opened in 1948. It lies in the communes Saint-Avold and Carling. It is named after Émile Huchet (1892–1940), who was the director of the coal mine Sarrre and Moselle, from 1924 to 1939. There's also a housing complex which was built for the workers, that bears his name.[1] That complex was built shortly afterwards, and is located south of the forest of Saint-Avold. For some time, the power plant was part of E.ON, and later Uniper SE. EPH from the Czech Republic, has operated it since 2019. The part of the plant that work with gas belong to Total.

Since the 1960s, the power plant is one of the biggest thermal power plants in France. It has a production capacity od 140 MW (electrical equivalent). There are two units of 430 MW each, powered by gas. In 2017, a total of 6.96 TWh was produced, 2.14 TWh with coal, and the remaining 4.82 TWh with gas.[2] In early 2022, Unit 6 of 595MW which was powered by with coal was shut down.

Because of current problems with French nuclear power plants, and prevailing energy scarcity resulting from the Russian attack on Ukraine, the French government is contemplating reactivating 595 MW Unit 6, but only for winter 2022.[3] [4]

References

49.1525°N 6.7°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: La cité Emile Huchet. Société d’Histoire du Pays Naborien. 2022-07-03. fr.
  2. Web site: Registre national des installations de production et de stockage d’électricité (au 31 décembre 2017). data.gouv.fr. 2022-07-03. fr.
  3. Web site: Électricité: le gouvernement se prépare au redémarrage de la centrale à charbon de Saint-Avold. rtl.fr. 2022-07-03. fr.
  4. Web site: 2022-07-12 . Coal is not making a comeback: Europe plans limited increase . 2022-08-06 . Ember . en-US.