Heyden Power Station

Heyden power station is a coal-fired power station located near Petershagen in Germany. The current station was commissioned in 1987, but the site has been used for power generation since 1950. It is owned and operated by the German energy corporation Uniper.

It is a coal-fired station with the largest unit capacity of any European power station: 865 MW. The hard coal it burns arrives several times a day by rail or by ship to its own dock on the river Weser from all over the world to be stored until use; the station stockpiles a month's supply of coal. At full capacity Heyden burns 265 tonnes of coal every hour, and is seldom not running as it supplies most of the daily base electricity demand.

Between January and February 2021 the power plant had to be restarted six times, even though it had been officially shut down because of the Energiewende.[1] In early April the plant was reclassified from shut down to "spinning power."[2]

From the end of August 2022, the hard-coal-fired power plant will go from mere grid reserve back into continuous operation in order to save natural gas.[3]

Environment

Heyden has been fitted with a flue-gas desulfurization plant, and cleans 99% of the dust from its emissions and 90% of the sulphur but none of the carbon dioxide greenhouse gas.

Statistics

Heyden outputs 2700 tonnes of steam per hour, has 32 pulverised coal burners, and its chimney is 225 metres high.

See also

References

  1. Daniel Wetzel (4 March 2021). "Phänomen Dunkelflaute – Der Kohle-Ausstieg hielt nur acht Tage". Die Welt (in German). Retrieved 15 April 2021. Die Anlage, die seit ihrer Abschaltung am Neujahrstag noch in ständiger Betriebsbereitschaft gehalten wird, musste auf Ersuchen des Netzbetreibers Tennet seit dem Jahreswechsel bereits sechsmal wieder hochgefahren werden
  2. "Bundesnetzagentur prüft Anträge zu systemrelevanten Anlagen der ersten Ausschreibung zum Kohleausstieg" (in German). Bundesnetzagentur. 2021-03-04. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  3. "Energie-Knappheit: Kraftwerk im Kreis Minden-Lübbecke geht wieder ans Netz" [Energy shortage: power plant in the Minden-Lübbecke district goes back online]. www.nw.de. 24 August 2022. Retrieved 24 August 2022.

52°22′55″N 8°59′54″E


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