List of power stations in Turkey
The most important power stations in Turkey are listed here. For a more complete list please see the World Resources Institute "Global Power Plant Database".[1] Turkey generates about 300 TWh of electricity per year.
High Carbon Emissions
Coal
All operational coal-fired power stations over 50MW are listed below.
Five plants were shutdown at the end of 2019 to reduce air pollution,[2] leaving total installed capacity at about 17 GW, with 1.3 GW under construction.[3] However[4] government may continue subsidizing some of the most polluting plants in 2020.[5][6] In 2019 almost 500 million lira was paid to them.[7]
In 2017 imported hard coal generated 51 TWh and local coal (almost all lignite) 44 TWh of electricity.[8]
Hard coal is estimated to emit 1126 g CO2-eq./kWh and lignite 1062 g CO2-eq./kWh.[9]
Station | Capacity (MW) | CO 2 emissions (Mt/year)[10] |
Owner | Capacity Mechanism Payment (₺m) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 [13] | 2019 [14] | 2020 [15] | 2021[16] | ||||
Afşin-Elbistan B power station | 1440 | 7.41 | EÜAŞ | ||||
Atlas Enerji İskenderun power station | 1200 | 4.66 | Atlas Enerji | eligible | eligible | ||
Bolu Göynük power station | 270 | 1.39 | Kazancı Holding | 30 | 40 | eligible | eligible |
Cenal power station | 1320 | 5.04 | Cenal Elektrik | eligible | |||
Çatalağzı | eligible | ||||||
Çayırhan power station | 620 | 3.65 | Ciner Group | ||||
Çolakoğlu | eligible | ||||||
Yatağan power station | 630 | 3.92 | Bereket Enerji | 70 | 94 | eligible | eligible |
Emba Hunutlu power station | 1320 | under construction | mainly Shanghai Electric Power Company[17] also local investors | ||||
Kangal | eligible | ||||||
Kemerköy power station | 630 | 3.78 | Yeniköy Kemerköy Elektrik | 70 | 94 | eligible | eligible |
Yeniköy power station | 420 | 2.61 | Yeniköy Kemerköy Elektrik | 47 | 63 | eligible | eligible |
18 Mart Can power station | 320 | 1.78 | EÜAŞ | ||||
Çan-2 power station | 330 | 1.54 | ODAŞ Group | 10 | 49 | eligible | eligible |
Orhaneli power station | 210 | 1.26 | Çelikler Holding | 23 | 31 | eligible | eligible |
Tufanbeyli power station | 450 | 2.32 | Enerjisa | 67 | eligible | eligible | |
Soma power station | 990 | 6.09 | Anadolu Birlik Holding via tr:Konya Şeker | 110 | 148 | eligible | eligible |
ZETES power stations | 2790 | 10.98 total ZETES | Eren Enerji | 13 | 10 | eligible | eligible |
İsken Sugözü power station | 1320 | 5.35 | tr:OYAK | ||||
İzdemir Enerji power station | 350 | 1.49 | İzdemir Enerji | eligible | eligible | ||
İÇDAŞ Bekirli-1 power station | 405 | 6.89 including İÇDAŞ Bekirli-2 | İÇDAŞ | 5 | 5 | eligible | eligible |
İÇDAŞ Bekirli-2 power station | 1200 | included in İÇDAŞ Bekirli-1 | İÇDAŞ | eligible | |||
Şırnak Silopi power station | 405 | 2.08 | Ciner Group | 45 | 61 | eligible | eligible |
Soma Kolin power station | 510 | 2.76 | Kolin Group | 50 | eligible | eligible | |
Seyitömer | eligible | ||||||
Polat power station | 51 | 0.26 | Polatyol | 8 | eligible | eligible | |
Gebze Çolakoğlu power station | 190 | Çolakoğlu Metalurji | eligible | eligible | |||
Aksa power station | 142 | Akkök Group | |||||
Totals: | 17513 | 56.8 | 423 | 720 |
Medium Carbon Emissions
Natural Gas
In 2020 about 68 TWh of electricity was generated from gas.[18] As of 2021, according to the head of the Electricity Producers’ Association, natural gas plants do not have enough money for maintenance work.[19]
Station | Community | Coordinates | Capacity (MW) | Construction year | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aliağa | İzmir | 180 | |||
Antalya | Antalya | 1150 | Leap 1=2009 Leap 2=2011 | ||
Adapazarı | Sakarya | 770 | 2002 October | ||
Gebze | Kocaeli | 1540 | 2002 October | ||
Bursa CCGT Power Station[20] | Bursa, Ovacık | 1432 | 2002 March | ||
İzmir | İzmir | 1520 | 2003 | ||
Hamitabat CCGT Power Station | Kırklareli | 1120 | ? | ||
Ambarlı CCGT Power Plant | İstanbul | 40.981651°N 28.690883°E | 1350 | ? | |
Ambarlı GT Power Plant | İstanbul | 1400 | ? | Under construction | |
Unimar Marmara Ereğlisi Power Plant | Marmara Ereğlisi, Tekirdağ Province | 41.007564°N 27.973473°E | 480 | 1999 |
Geothermal
The CO2 emissions from new geothermal plants in Turkey are high but gradually decline: lifecycle emissions are still being researched as of 2019.[21]
Station | Community | Coordinates | Capacity (MW) | Construction year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kızıldere Geothermal Power Plant[22] | Sarayköy, Denizli | 37°57′00″N 28°50′35″E | 95 | 1984 |
Gümüşköy Geothermal Power Plant[23] | Germencik, Aydın | 37°51′20″N 27°27′48″E | 13.2 | ? |
Low carbon emissions
Hydroelectric
Solar photovoltaic
As of 2021 there are 7 GW of solar PV.[24]
Station | Community | Coordinates | Capacity (MW) | Construction year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Manisa | 40 | ? | ||
Solar thermal
Station | Community | Coordinates | Capacity (MW) | Construction year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Greenway Mersin CSP | 5[25] | ? | ||
Wind
As of 2015, there were 172 wind farms in Turkey, of which 171 were active in production with a total installed capacity of 6.195 GW making out 7.7% of the total installed power capacity of the country. The generated electricity was 15.685 TWh in 2016, which supplied 6% of the total electrical energy consumption.[26]
Name | Location | Province | Capacity (MW) | Year | Manufacturer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aliağa Wind Farm | Aliağa | İzmir | 193 | 2008 | Nordex Enercon |
Bahçe Wind Farm | Bahçe | Osmaniye | 135 | 2009 | GE |
Bandırma Wind Farm | Bandırma | Balıkesir | 30 | 2006 | GE |
Bozcaada Wind Farm | Bozcaada | Çanakkale | 10 | 2000 | Enercon |
Çanta Wind Farm | Çanta, Silivri | İstanbul | 47.5 | 2014 | Nordex |
Çatalca Wind Farm | Çatalca | İstanbul | 60 | 2008 | Vestas |
Çeşme Wind Farm | Çeşme | İzmir | 39 | 2007 | Enercon |
Dağpazarı Wind Farm | Dağpazarı | Mersin | 39 | 2012 | Siemens |
Didim Wind Farm | Didim | Aydın | 31 | 2009 | Suzlon |
İntepe Wind Farm | İntepe | Çanakkale | 30 | 2007 | Enercon |
Mut Wind Farm | Mut | Mersin | 33 | 2010 | Vestas |
Samandağ Wind Farm | Samandağ | Hatay | 35 | 2009 | Nordex |
Sayalar Wind Farm | Sayalar | Manisa | 30 | 2008 | Enercon |
Soma Wind Farm | Soma | Manisa | 141 | 2012 | Enercon |
Şamlı Wind Farm | Şamlı | Balıkesir | 90 | 2008 | Vestas |
Nuclear
Station | Community | Coordinates | Capacity (MW) | Construction year | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant[27][28] | 36.144893°N 33.540376°E | 4800 | ? | Under construction | |
Sinop Nuclear Power Plant[29] | 42.085739°N 34.955378°E | 4400 | Cancelled | ||
See also
- List of power stations in Asia
- List of power stations in Europe
- List of largest power stations in the world
- Hydroelectricity in Turkey
- Wind power in Turkey
Notes
- Many of the values in the column for lignite power stations must be too low: this is partly because Carbon Brief has not taken into account the actual generation: this can be seen by the routine calculation of dividing the number in the generation column of List of active coal-fired power stations in Turkey by 1000 (because the average emission factor is 31 tCO2/TJ for Turkish lignite,[11] so it must emit well over 1000g CO2 per kWh) and noticing that it is larger than the number in this column. Similarly the value for Çatalağzı may be too high.
External links
References
- "Global Power Plant Database".
- "Filtre taktırmayan ve baca gazı arıtma önlemi almayan 5 termik santral tamamen kapatıldı". 2020-01-02. Retrieved 2020-01-02.
- "Coal". Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources (Turkey). Retrieved 7 January 2019.
- "2020 Yılı Kapasite Mekanizmasından Yararlanacak Santrallerin Nihai Listesi | TÜRKİYE ELEKTRİK İLETİM A.Ş." TEİAŞ (in Turkish). Retrieved 2020-01-04.
- "Devlet desteği sürecek". odatv.com (in Turkish). Retrieved 2020-01-04.
- Haber, Kamu (2020-01-29). "Kapanan santrallere devlet desteği devam edecek". Kamu Güncel Haber (in Turkish). Retrieved 2020-02-04.
- "MUÇEP: Muğla'daki tüm termik santraller kapatilmalidir!". www.milasonder.com (in Turkish). Retrieved 2020-02-04.
- "2017 Annual Report" (PDF). EÜAŞ.
- Atilgan et al (2016), p. 177
- "Global coal power map". Carbon Brief. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
- Turkstat report (2020), p. 50.
- "Estimating carbon dioxide emissions from coal plants". Global Energy Monitor. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
- "Kapasite mekanizması Aralık ayı ödemeleri açıklandı". Yeşil Ekonomi. 23 January 2019.
- "Kapasite mekanizmasıyla 2019'da 40 santrale 1.6 milyar lira ödendi". Enerji Günlüğü (in Turkish). 2020-02-06. Retrieved 2020-02-07.
- "2020 Yılı Kapasite Mekanizmasından Yararlanacak Santrallerin Nihai Listesi | TÜRKİYE ELEKTRİK İLETİM A.Ş." TEİAŞ (in Turkish). Retrieved 2020-01-04.
- "2021 Yılı Kapasite Mekanizması Başvurularının Değerlendirilmesi". Turkish Electricity Transmission Corporation (in Turkish). Retrieved 2021-01-07.
- "China's power plant project with direct investment in Turkey starts construction". www.xinhuanet.com. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- "Water level drops in Turkey's hydroelectric plants change balances in electricity supply". Daily Sabah. 2021-01-05. Retrieved 2021-01-07.
- "Hydro plants' electricity generation down 12 pct". Hürriyet Daily News. 2021-01-06.
- http://www.euas.gov.tr/
- "Characterizing the declining CO2 emissions from Turkish geothermal power plants" (PDF). World Bank. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
- Kindap, Ali; Kaya, Tevfik; Tut Haklıdır, Füsun S.; Alpagut Bükülmez, Ayşe (25–29 April 2010). Privatization of Kizildere Geothermal Power Plant and New Approaches for Field and Plant (PDF). Proceedings World Geothermal Congress 2010. Bali, Indonesia: geothermal-energy.org.
- "POWER Engineers Selected to Design Advanced Geothermal Power Plant in Turkey". powerconstructors.com. May 2006.
- "Turkey to launch mini solar tenders in 2 months, energy minister says". Daily Sabah. 2021-01-06. Retrieved 2021-01-07.
- "Mersin'de Türkiye'nin ilk güneş enerjisi kulesi kuruldu" (in Turkish). 24 April 2013. Retrieved 16 September 2013.
- "Rüzgar Enerji Santralleri" (in Turkish). Enerji Atlası. Retrieved 2017-08-04.
- "Construction of Turkey's First Nuclear Power Plant will Start in 2013". Journal of Turkish Weekly. 8 December 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
- "Governmental approval for Turkish construction plan". World Nuclear News. 15 July 2010. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
- "MHI to Step Up Involvement in Sinop Nuclear Power Plant Project In Turkey". Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd., mhi.co.jp. May 8, 2013. Archived from the original on June 9, 2013. Retrieved June 21, 2013.
Sources
- Atilgan, Burcin; Azapagic, Adisa (2016). "An integrated life cycle sustainability assessment of electricity generation in Turkey". Energy Policy. 93: 168–186. doi:10.1016/j.enpol.2016.02.055.
- EÜAŞ - A briefing for investors, insurers and banks (PDF) (Report). Europe Beyond Coal. January 2020.