Chita Thermal Power Station Explained

Chita Thermal Power Station
Country:Japan
Location:Chita, Aichi
Coordinates:34.9867°N 136.8436°W
Status:O
Commissioned:1966
Operator:JERA
Th Fuel Primary:Natural gas
Ps Site Area:560,000 sq m
Ps Units Operational:2
Ps Units Decommissioned:4
Ps Electrical Capacity:1708 MW
Ps Electrical Cap Fac:43.5

is a large thermal power station operated by JERA in the city of Chita, Aichi, Japan.[1] [2]

History

Plans to build a power station in Chita were drawn up in the early 1960s, and a site was selected on reclaimed land facing Ise Bay in the northern part of Chita Peninsula.

Unit 1 came on line in February 1966. A total of six units were built between 1966 and 1974 to power the cities and industries of Aichi Prefecture and Nagoya Metropolis.

Units 1 through 4 were modernized and converted to burn natural gas in 1985, whereas Units 5 and 6 were designed as LNG-fired plants from the start. From 1992 to 1996, Units 1, 2, 5 and 6 were shut down and were converted into combined cycle plants by adding a gas turbine to the existing boiler-steam turbine units to reuse exhaust gases.[3] This gave the Chita Thermal Power Station a total power generating capacity of 3966 MW, making it one of the largest in Japan at the time.

Unit 1 was taken offline on March 15, 2017, followed by Unit 2 and Unit 3 on April 1, 2017, and Unit 4 on October 31, 2017. As these units have not been demolished, the JERA home page still lists the nameplate capacity of the plant as 3,966 MW.

In April 2019, all thermal power plant operations of Chubu Electric Power were transferred to JERA, a joint venture between Chubu Electric and TEPCO Fuel & Power, Inc, a subsidiary of Tokyo Electric Power Company.

Plant details

UnitFuelTypeCapacityOn lineStatus
1LNGCombined cycle529 MWFeb 1966Offline from March 2017
2LNGCombined cycle529 MWJan 1967Offline from Apr 2017
3LNG, Crude Oil, Heavy OilSteam Turbine500 MWMar 1968Offine from Apr 2017
4LNG, Crude Oil, Heavy OilSteam Turbine700 MWMar 1974Offine from Oct 2017
5LNGCombined cycle854 MWMarch 1978operational
6LNG Combined cycle854 MWApril 1978operational

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Power stations in Japan . 2011-12-18 . https://archive.today/20121204150723/http://www.industcards.com/st-other-japan.htm . 2012-12-04 . dead .
  2. Web site: FEPC . Principal Thermal Power Plants (1,000MW or greater) . The Federation of Electric Power Companies of Japan . October 1, 2019.
  3. Web site: Chubu Electric News . 2011-12-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120616135920/http://www.chuden.co.jp/resource/corporate/news_55_N05530.pdf . 2012-06-16 . dead .