Spalding Power Station

Spalding Power Station is a 860 MW gas-fired power station one mile north of Spalding on West Marsh Road close to the River Welland. The current site provides enough electricity for one million households.

Spalding Power Station
Spalding Power Station
Viewed from the south in June 2006
CountryEngland
LocationLincolnshire, East Midlands
Coordinates52.8078°N 0.1321°W / 52.8078; -0.1321
Construction began2001
Commission date2004
Operator(s)Intergen (Independent Generator)
Thermal power station
Primary fuelNatural gas
Combined cycle?Yes
Power generation
Units planned1.8GW
Nameplate capacity860 MW
External links
WebsiteSpalding Energy
CommonsRelated media on Commons

History

The power station, known as the Spalding Energy Facility, is sited on a former sugar beet site of British Sugar. It was first proposed in October 1996 and given approval by the DTI in November 2000. It is run by the Spalding Energy Company Ltd, a subsidiary of Intergen. Intergen is jointly owned by the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan and China Huaneng Group.[1]

The electricity is supplied to Centrica under a 17-year deal agreed on 22 May 2002;[2][3] Centrica originally had 50% of the equity in the project in December 1999, and they supply the gas. It was the first power station to be project financed under the New Electricity Trading Arrangements in England and Wales, and funded by Barclays Capital.

It was Intergen's third UK power station after Rocksavage and Coryton. Intergen is based in Burlington, Massachusetts.

Construction began in March 2002. It opened in October 2004 at a cost of £425 million.[4]

Expansion

In 2016 InterGen won 15-year Capacity Market contract from the UK Government.[5] The expansion is on land adjacent to the existing power station. The new power plant is valued at £100 million. Construction of new 300MW facility is expected to be completed in June 2019.[6][7][8]

In October 2018 new Siemens F-class Open cycle gas turbine brought to the construction site.

Specification

It is powered by natural gas in a combined cycle (CCGT) plant. It features two General Electric 9FA+e gas turbines with two VOGT-NEM heat recovery steam generators and one Hitachi steam turbine. VOGT Power International is based in Louisville, Kentucky, and is owned by Babcock Power Inc. It uses two GE air-cooled turbo generators, rated at 296 MVA with a terminal voltage of 15.5 kV on each of the gas turbines. On the three-stage steam turbine is a Hitachi hydrogen-cooled turbogenerator, with a rating of 430 MVA and a terminal voltage of 24 kV. Actual power output depends on atmospheric conditions, such as temperature and humidity. 360 MW comes from the steam turbine generator, and 265 MW from each of the gas turbine generators.

See also

References

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