Kashima Power Station

Kashima Power Station
Country Japan
Location Kamisu, Ibaraki
Coordinates 35°52′47″N 140°41′22″E / 35.87972°N 140.68944°E / 35.87972; 140.68944Coordinates: 35°52′47″N 140°41′22″E / 35.87972°N 140.68944°E / 35.87972; 140.68944
Status Operational
Commission date 1971
Owner(s) Tepco
Thermal power station
Primary fuel Fuel oil
city gas
Type Steam turbine (Units 1-6)
Advanced combined cycle gas turbine (Units 7a-c)
Power generation
Units operational 4 × 600 MW (suspended)
2 × 1,000 MW
3 × 420 MW
Nameplate capacity 5,660 MW
(3,260 MW active, 2,400 MW suspended indefinitely)

Kashima Power Station (鹿島火力発電所, Kashima karyokuhatsudensho) is a large oil-fired and gas-fired power station in Kamisu, Ibaraki, Japan. The facility operates with an installed capacity of 5,660 MW, making it the largest fossil-fueled power station in the world. The plant includes four oil-fired steam turbines rated at 600 MW, two oil-fired steam turbines rated at 1,000 MW,[1] and three advanced combined cycle gas turbines rated at 420 MW added in 2014. As of April 2016, the four oil-fired 600 MW turbines have been suspended indefinitely.[2]

See also

References

  1. Thermal power stations in JapanArchived 2011-03-19 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. "Electricity Supply Facilities - Thermal Power Station - TEPCO".


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