Qingshui Geothermal Power Plant

Coordinates: 24°36′44.3″N 121°38′13.1″E / 24.612306°N 121.636972°E / 24.612306; 121.636972
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Qingshui Geothermal Power Plant
Map
Official name清水地熱發電廠
Country
LocationDatong, Yilan County, Taiwan
Coordinates24°36′44.3″N 121°38′13.1″E / 24.612306°N 121.636972°E / 24.612306; 121.636972
StatusOperational
Commission date23 November 2021
Construction costNT$765 million
Owner(s)Fabulous Power Co.
Operator(s)Fabulous Power Co.
Geothermal power station
Min. source temp.180°C
Max. well depth2,100 m
Power generation
Nameplate capacity4.2 MW
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

The Qingshui Geothermal Power Plant (traditional Chinese: 清水地熱發電廠; simplified Chinese: 清水地热发电厂; pinyin: Qīngshuǐ Dìrè Fādiànchǎng) is a geothermal power plant in Datong Township, Yilan County, Taiwan.

History[edit]

In 2017, Fabulous Power Co. won the right to use the land where the plant stands today.[1] The construction of the power plant was completed in September 2021 and was approved to be commissioned on 27 October the same year.[2] It was then commissioned on 23 November 2021.[3]

Technical specifications[edit]

The power plant has an installed generation capacity of 4.2 MW. The temperature of the geothermal reservoir is around 180°C with a depth of 1,200–2,100 meters. It has an hourly power generation capacity of 3,150 kWh.[4]

Finance[edit]

The power plant was constructed with a cost of NT$765 million. Yiyuan, the company that invested into the power plant, was granted the permit to operate the power purchase agreement for 20 years, in which it will pay the government NT$2 million annually.[2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Oung, Angelica (22 September 2021). "Geothermal plant in Yilan to come online this month". Taipei Times. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b Huang, Tzu-li (16 November 2021). "Taiwan to see its first geothermal power plant in 3 decades". Taiwan News. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  3. ^ Richter, Alexander (16 November 2021). "Start of new 4.2 MW geothermal plant in Taiwan set for Nov. 23, 2021". Think Geoenergy. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  4. ^ Richter, Alexander (22 September 2021). "Start of 4.2 MW Quingshui geothermal plant imminent in Taiwan". Think Geoenergy. Retrieved 1 November 2021.