Massive Chinese coal plant begins operations


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Guodian Beilun Power Plant in Ningbo, Zhejiang, is a 5,000 MW coal-fired facility with ultra-supercritical units, World Bank financing, and new 500 kV lines enabling full-load operation on the East China Power Grid.

 

The Main Points

A 5,000 MW coal-fired station in Beilun, Zhejiang, World Bank-funded, linked by 500 kV lines to the East China Grid.

  • First coal-fired plant in China financed by World Bank.
  • Seven units: five 600 MW, two 1,000 MW; total 5,000 MW.
  • Phases: I (1994) 1,200 MW; II (2000) 1,800 MW; III (2009) 2,000 MW.

 

Following an increased load in the East China Power Grid, the output of Guodian Beilun Power Plant, which is a subsidiary of China Guodian Corporation and the largest coal-fired power plant in China, hit a record 5,000 megawatts MW on July 2.

 

Guodian Beilun Power Plant, which is in Xinqi Town, Beilun District of Ningbo City in East China's Zhejiang Province, is the first coal-fired power plant to be built in China with a loan from the World Bank. The power plant has five 600-MW subcritical units and two 1,000-MW ultra-supercritical units in operation, with a total installed capacity of 5,000 MW. Of which, Phase I 1,200 MW of the power plant kicked off in January 1988 and was completed in November 1994, and Phase II 1,800 MW kicked off in June 1996 and was completed in September 2000. The 2,000-MW Phase III project kicked off on December 15, 2006, and was completed in June 2009, as other large coal plants were also coming online nationwide.

Due to the impact of the global financial crisis, a weak load demand, and the restriction on outgoing transmission lines, the power plant was not in full-load operations by July 2010. As a result, Guodian Zhejiang Beilun Power Generation Company Limited, the owner of the power plant, and other major power providers tried to upgrade outgoing transmission lines. As a support project to the Phase I expansion of the power plant, two 500-kilovolt transmission lines, Beilun-Jurong and Beilun-Zhangzhou, were commissioned in late June 2010. Additionally, an improving economy and rising power investment and a coming summer peak in power consumption created favorable conditions for the power plant to operate all seven units in full load.

On July 2, 2010, the load of East China Power Grid surpassed 160 gigawatts, a record high in its history. It's expected that the maximum load in East China Power Grid would reach 162 gigawatts this summer as the NDRC approved 12 new coal plants recently to meet demand, an increase of 13 from the same period last year.

 

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