Krafla Power Station

Krafla Power Station

Krafla Power Station
Location of Krafla Power Station in Iceland
Country Iceland
Location Krafla
Coordinates 65°42′13.9″N 16°46′23″W / 65.703861°N 16.77306°W / 65.703861; -16.77306Coordinates: 65°42′13.9″N 16°46′23″W / 65.703861°N 16.77306°W / 65.703861; -16.77306
Status Operational
Construction began 1974
Commission date 1977
Owner(s) Landsvirkjun
Geothermal power station
Wells 33
Max. well depth 2,222 m (7,290 ft)
Power generation
Units operational 2 x 30 MW
Make and model Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Nameplate capacity 60 MW
Website
landsvirkjun.com

The Krafla geothermal power plant Krafla geothermal power plant is a geothermal, which is located in Iceland, close to the Krafla Volcano and the lake Mývatn. It is considered to be Iceland´s largest power station with its 33 boreholes and is able to produce 500 GWh of electricity annually with its installed capacity of 60 MW (2 x 30 megawatt).

The construction work started in 1974, but due to volcanic activities in the area, the building was slowed down. The Krafla power station was officially launched in the early 1977, but was only able to produce at its full efficiency of 60 megawatt after a second steam turbine was installed in 1996.[1]

Originally the power plant was owned by the government, but was purchased in 1985 and has since been operated by Landsvirkjun (National Power Company).[2] About 15 employees work there full-time.

Geothermal Power Station Details

The Krafla geothermal power plant consists of two 30 megawatt units, with double pressure inlet and dual flow turbines with 5 steps on each side. It takes its energy from 17 high pressure production wells with 110 kg/second of 7.7 bar and, due to new technologies, 5 low-pressure production wells with 36 kg/s of 2.2 bar.[3]

The other 7 wells are not in use and 5 wells do not even exist anymore. The turbines consume 52.5 and 17.8 kg/s of high- and low-pressure steam each. If the inlet pressure and the mass flow were raised, the output of both turbines could be increased to 35megawatt.[4]

One of the additional wells (IDDP-1), which was drilled in the Krafla geothermal reservoir in 1999, is nowadays known for being the world´s hottest geothermal well, since its borehole reaches magma at its lowest point with a temperature of 430 °C. The right to use the well is owned by Mannvit.[5]

Project development

The construction work of the Krafla geothermal power plant started in 1974, with trial boreholes,[6] after a contact over two planned units was signed.

After the drilling started, Seismic and volcanic activities in the area threatened the building of the power station, like the major volcanic eruptions less than 2 km from the power station away, introducing the possibility that it would never start operating at all. Nevertheless, it was finished in early 1977 and was launched in 1978, though the power plant did not work to its full potential until the seismic and volcanic activities strongly declined in 1984 and further boreholes were drilled.

In 1996 even more boreholes were drilled and a second turbine was installed, but Krafla was only able to actually produce 60megawatt in 1999, after the renovations were finished, which mainly consisted of renewing the steam gathering system in order to meet the standards for the double pressure inlet to the turbines and the control and safety system in general.

The two companies which were in charge of the engineering of the Krafla geothermal power station since very early in its developing process were Mannvit and Verkís.[7]

See also

References

Media related to Krafla power plant at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.