Alessandro Volta thermal power station | |
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Coordinates | 42°21′30″N11°32′11″E / 42.3583°N 11.5364°E |
Status | Operational |
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Power generation | |
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External links | |
Website | corporate |
Commons | Related media on Commons |
The Alessandro Volta Power Plant was a 3600 MW polycombustible thermal power plant located in the municipality of Montalto di Castro and owned by Enel. [1]
It was commissioned in 1989 near the unfinished Montalto di Castro Nuclear Power Station of which it used part of the site and the sea water intakes already built.
It was decommissioned in 2019 and scheduled for disposal and is being negotiated for conversion into data centers for IT companies.[ citation needed ]
The plant consists of four 660 MW steam units that can be fired by either dense fuel oil or natural gas, and eight small 120-125 MW Nuovo Pignone (125MW) and Fiat (120MW) turbogas units paired in a combined cycle with the steam units.[ citation needed ]
It is the most powerful thermal power plant in Italy but is relatively underutilized (about 3000 hours per year[ when? ] out of a theoretical maximum of 8760), [2] due to the high cost of fuel.
In 2009, the plant emitted one million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, fully offset by the purchase of approximately one million CERs. [3]
Specifically, in order to gain possession of the necessary CERs, Enel has invested in a project in China that involves the destruction of tons of trifluoromethane (also known by the abbreviation HFC-23, it is a very dangerous greenhouse gas).[ citation needed ] In this way, providing on the one hand the removal of greenhouse gases in China, it comes into possession of credits that allow it to emit an equivalent amount of carbon dioxide in Italy.
Electricity generation is the process of generating electric power from sources of primary energy. For utilities in the electric power industry, it is the stage prior to its delivery to end users or its storage, using for example, the pumped-storage method.
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