Nakoso Thermal Power Station

Summary

The Nakoso Thermal Power Station (勿来発電所, Nakoso Karyoku Hatsudensho) is a coal-fired thermal power station operated by the Jōban Joint Power Co., Ltd. in the city of Iwaki, Fukushima, Japan. The facility is located on the Pacific coast of Honshu. The Jōban Joint Power Co., Ltd is a joint venture between Tohoku Electric, Tokyo Electric and a cooperative of coal producers in Fukushima Prefecture.

Nakoso Thermal Power Station
勿来発電所
Nakoso Thermal Power Station
Map
CountryJapan
LocationIwaki, Fukushima
Coordinates36°54′39″N 140°48′51″E / 36.91083°N 140.81417°E / 36.91083; 140.81417
StatusOperational
Commission date1957
Owner(s)Jōban Joint Power Co., Ltd
Operator(s)
  • Joban Joint Power
Thermal power station
Primary fuelCoal
Power generation
Units operational4
Units decommissioned6
Nameplate capacity1700 MW
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

History edit

The Jōban Joint Power Co., Ltd. was founded to provide baseline electrical power to the Tokyo Metropolis using low-grade coal from the Jōban coal fields of Fukushima Prefecture. The first two units came on line in 1957, followed by Units 3 and 4 in 1960, Unit 5 in 1961, Unit 6 in 1966 and Unit 7 in 1970. Due to increasing costs for domestic coal, Units 7 through 9 were designed to burn a mixture of carbonized sewage sludge with coal and heavy oil. Units 8 and 9 came on line in 1983. In March 2011, biomass (wood pellets) was introduced to the mixture.

A Coal Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) demonstration unit was constructed and tested from September 2007 to March 2013. Commercial operation began as Unit 10 in April 2013, and the institute was merged into Joban Joint Thermal Power.

Due to the age of the facilities and cost of maintenance and operation, Units 1-5 were abolished by 1987 and Unit 6 in November 2015.

Operations were temporarily suspended due to damage caused by the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in March 2011. At the time of the earthquake, Unit 8 was down for periodic maintenance. Most of the damage occurred at Onahama Port, which contained the wharf which was used for unloading coal, and to the coal conveyor to the power plant. Unit 9 resumed operation on June 30, 2012, Unit 8 on July 28 and Unit 7 on December 21.

On May 15, 2014, TEPCO and Joban Joint Thermal Power Co., Ltd. announced that it intended to construct a new large coal gasification combined cycle (IGCC) adjacent to this power plant as part of the Fukushima recovery project. This plant is scheduled for completion in September 2020, with a projected output of 540 MW.

Plant details edit

Unit Fuel Type Capacity On line Status
1 Coal, Heavy Oil Steam turbine 35 MW Nov 1957 Decommissioned 1983, Scrapped
2 Coal, Heavy Oil Steam turbine 35 MW 1960 Decommissioned 1983, Scrapped
3 Coal, Heavy Oil Steam turbine 75 MW 1960 Decommissioned 1987, Scrapped
4 Coal, Heavy Oil Steam turbine 75 MW 1960 Decommissioned 1987, Scrapped
5 Coal, Heavy Oil Steam turbine 75 MW 1961 Decommissioned 1987, Scrapped
6 Heavy Oil Steam turbine 75 MW Nov 1966 Decommissioned 2015, Scrapped
7 Coal / Biomass Steam turbine 250 MW July 1970 operational
8 Coal / Biomass Steam turbine 600 MW September 1983 operational
9 Coal / Heavy Oil / Biomass Steam turbine 600 MW December 1983 operational
10 Coal IGCC 250 MW April 2013 operational

See also edit

External links edit

  • Tohoku Electric list of major power stations
  • Official home page