Scholven Power Station

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Scholven Power Station (aerial view) Scholven Powerplant.jpg
Scholven Power Station (aerial view)
Scholven Power Station Power plant Gelsenkirchen-Scholven2.jpg
Scholven Power Station
Cooling towers of Scholven Power Station from the north Power plant Gelsenkirchen-Scholven1.jpg
Cooling towers of Scholven Power Station from the north
Scholven Power Station Gelsenkirchen Kraftwerk Scholven.jpg
Scholven Power Station
Crossbars on the chimney used by the units B-E, which carry the 220 kV-circuit of the powerline leaving Unit D Schornstein Scholven Hochspannungsleitung.jpg
Crossbars on the chimney used by the units B-E, which carry the 220 kV-circuit of the powerline leaving Unit D

Scholven Power Station is a coal-fired power plant in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. With an installed capacity of 2,126 megawatts, it once was one of the largest power stations in Europe. It is owned by Uniper.

Contents

Structure

Two power station units present on the location were beaconed up to their shut-down with oil. The electricity produced at Scholven power station once converted about 3% of the German electrical demand. The units B - E, the Buer district heating power station (FWK) and the Scholven steam works (DWS) supply steam to neighbouring chemical enterprises and long-distance heating to some surrounding cities. The two 300-metre (984 ft) tall chimneys, which are amongst the tallest structures in Germany, form an impressive industrial skyline together with the 5 115-metre (377 ft) tall cooling towers. An interesting feature of this power station is that the smokestack used by units B-E has three booms, on which the conductors of the 220 kV-line leaving Unit D are attached. The power station area and the neighbouring waste dump of the coal mine Scholven became a film scene in the Tatort "The ball in the body" of 1979.

History

The power station was an enterprise for the covering of the internal requirement at river and steam of the coal mine Scholven. Soon however, a high performance main power station developed from it. In the years 1968 to 1971 the almost identically constructed blocks B to E went into operation, in 1974 and 1975 followed G and H (50% portion of RWE power), 1979 the block F and at the end of 1985 the long-distance heating power station Buer (FWK). Block G was shut down in summer 2001 and Block H finally in summer 2003.

In August 2008, two of the plant's 7 cooling towers were demolished. [1]

Technical Data

Blockfuelperformance (net)CommissioningDecommissioningSystemically importantDecommissioning ordered
1natural gas140 MWel2024
Bhard coal345 MWel196831.03.203130.11.2024
Chard coal345 MWel196931.03.2031
Dhard coal345 MWel19702014
Ehard coal345 MWel19712014
Fhard coal676 MWel19792014
FWKhard coal70 MWel198530.03.2023
Goil640 MWel19742001
Hoil640 MWel19752003

See also

References

  1. tagesschau.de. Kühltürme gesprengt (in German). Retrieved 2025-01-19 via www.tagesschau.de.

51°36′10″N7°00′34″E / 51.60278°N 7.00944°E / 51.60278; 7.00944