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Goldisthal Pumped Storage Station

Coordinates: 50°30′26″N 11°00′18″E / 50.50722°N 11.00500°E / 50.50722; 11.00500
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Goldisthal Pumped Storage Station
The power station on the banks of the lower reservoir
Official namePumpspeicherkraftwerk Goldisthal
CountryGermany
LocationGoldisthal
Coordinates50°30′26″N 11°00′18″E / 50.50722°N 11.00500°E / 50.50722; 11.00500
StatusOperational
Construction began1997
Opening dateSeptember 30, 2003 (2003-09-30)
Construction cost600M €
Owner(s)Vattenfall
Upper reservoir
Total capacity12,000,000 m3 (9,729 acre⋅ft)
Lower reservoir
Total capacity18,900,000 m3 (15,322 acre⋅ft)
Power Station
Hydraulic head302 m (991 ft)
Pump-generators4 × 265 MW
Installed capacity1,060 MW
Capacity factor19.4%
Storage capacity8.5 GWh
Annual generation1,806 GW·h

The Goldisthal Pumped Storage Station is a pumped-storage power station in the Thueringer Mountains at the upper run of the river Schwarza in Goldisthal, Germany. It was constructed between 1997 and 2004. It has an installed capacity of 1,060 megawatts (1,420,000 hp), the largest hydroelectric power plant in Germany and one of largest in Europe.[1][2]

Goldisthal Pumped Storage Station is owned and operated by Vattenfall (Vattenfall Wasserkraft GmbH).[3]

Facility

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The upper reservoir is located at an altitude of 880 m (2,890 ft). It has an active (or usable) capacity of 12 million m³ and a surface area of 55 hectares. In order to create this basin, the mountain summit was cleared away. This stored quantity of water is enough for eight hours of operation. This corresponds to a maximally storable electric power quantity of 8.5 GWh with the existing height difference between storage basins and turbines. Two 800 m long penstocks, inclined at approximately 25 degrees serve as a conduit for water transfer. The lower reservoir has a capacity of 18.9 million cubic metres (670×10^6 cu ft). The power station contains four 265 MW Francis pump turbines.[1][2]

Construction

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From the outset of planning of this power station, it met with opposition and was contested with broad resistance from environmental protection groups, in particular from the Green League. The project was first discussed in 1965 and in 1975 geological investigations were carried out. Planning was halted in 1980–1981 due to funding issues but was then resumed in 1988. Construction eventually began in 1997 and the first generators were commissioned in 2003. It was officially opened on 30 September 2003. In 2004, all four generators were commissioned. The construction costs amounted to 600 million euros.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Beyer, Thomas (2007-03-01). "Goldisthal Pumped-Storage Plant: More than Power Production". Hydroworld.com. Archived from the original on 2012-05-29. Retrieved 2017-03-20.
  2. ^ a b History and characteristics of Goldisthal pumped-storage power plant Archived 2015-03-26 at the Wayback Machine, VattenFall.com website, 6 February 2012. Retrieved October 2013.
  3. ^ Zeitung, Süddeutsche (2023-07-12). "Vattenfall: Entscheidung 2030 über neues Pumpspeicherwerk". Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-08-08.
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