Misplaced Pages

Thorold Cogeneration Station

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Thorold Cogeneration Station
Country
  • Canada
LocationThorold, Ontario
Coordinates43°06′25″N 79°11′55″W / 43.10694°N 79.19861°W / 43.10694; -79.19861
StatusOperational
Construction began2007
Commission date2010
Construction cost$520 million CAD
OwnerNorthland Power
Thermal power station
Primary fuelNatural gas
Secondary fuelLandfill gas
Turbine technologyGas turbine / Steam turbine
Cooling sourceWelland Canal
Combined cycle?Yes
Cogeneration?Yes
Power generation
Units operational1 × 170 MW GE 7FA gas turbine
1 × Alstom fired HRSG
1 × 95 MW Siemens SST-900-RH steam turbine
1 × Shin Nippon 9 MW steam turbine
2 × Foster Wheeler auxiliary boilers
Nameplate capacity265 MW
[edit on Wikidata]

The Thorold Cogeneration Station is a natural gas-fired station owned by Northland Power, brought into operation on March 28, 2010. The plant formerly supplied steam to the nearby AbitibiBowater paper mill before the mill was indefinitely idled in March 2017. Power is produced under contract to the Ontario Power Authority.

Description

The Power Station consists of one 170 MW gas turbine, supplied by General Electric, that in a combined cycle configuration also generates steam for a steam turbine, resulting in a combined total of 265 MW. The plant uses both natural gas and landfill gas. In addition to power generation, the Thorold Plant includes two Natural Gas/Waste Gas fired boilers which will provide necessary steam to the paper mill when the Gas Turbine is not in service.

References

  1. Dongen, Matthew (24 September 2007). "Gas-fired power plant opens in Thorold". St. Catharines Standard. stcatharinesstandard.ca. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  2. Power Authority Contract Information
  3. "Resolute Announces Indefinite Idling of Thorold Newsprint Mill".
  4. Thorold

External links

Thermal power stations in Ontario
Active
Biomass
Natural gas
Inactive
Biomass
Coal
Oil
Companies
Converted from coal. Dual-fuel, can also use oil.
Categories
Power stations in Ontario
Power stations in Canada


Stub icon

This article about a Canadian power station is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: