The Reykjanes Power Station is
a geothermal power plantlocated in Reykjanes at the southwestern
tip of Iceland. As of 2009, the plant produces 100MW of electricity, with an
expansion plan to increase by 50MW in 2010.
The
pioneering Reykjanes Geothermal Power Plant in Iceland is now producing 100MWe
from two 50MWe turbines. The plant uses steam from a reservoir at 290 to 320°C
– the first time that geothermal steam of such high temperature has been used
to generate electricity on a large scale.
The
new plant is located on the Reykjanes peninsula, in the south-western corner of
Iceland. Owned by Sudurnes Regional Heating
Corporation, the plant was designed by Enex, a
conglomerate from the Icelandic energy sector with wide experience in
developing geothermal energy and hydropower. The two turbines started operation
in May 2006 after testing and were formally brought on-line in December 2006.
HIGHEST TEMPERATURE YET FOR GEOTHERMAL STEAM
The
Reykjanes plant uses steam and geothermal brine extracted from twelve
2,700m-deep wells. After extraction, the brine is piped into a steam separator.
From there, the separated steam passes under 19 bars of pressure to a steam
dryer and into the two 50MW turbines.
The
plant is situated close to the ocean front, so seawater (4,000l/s) at 8°C can
be pumped through a condenser for cooling and condensing the brine.
NEARLY 20% OF ICELAND'S ELECTRICITY FROM GEOTHERMAL
Geothermal
resources have been used for over 70 years in Iceland. The geothermal area at
Reykjanes is located on top of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, formed by plate
tectonics that are moving in separate directions. That gives high geothermal
energy, with the Reykjanes area being where the plate boundary of the Reykjanes
Ridge comes on land. The area is about 2km2 in size. Energy has been extracted
from the area for around 30 years without significantly reducing the geothermal
reserves.
Geothermal
power plants produce nearly 20% of the country's electricity; geothermal
heating also supplies nearly 90% of the country's domestic heating and hot
water requirements. Nearly all the rest comes from hydroelectric generation,
with less than 0.1% from fossil fuels.
Geothermal
brine cannot be used directly for heating because of its high mineral content.
On cooling, it releases great quantities of hard deposits (silica) which block
pipes and other equipment. The high temperature and salt content of the water
therefore demands heat exchangers.
REYKJANES POWER STATION |
|
Reykjanes Power Station |
|
LOCATION |
Reykjanes, Iceland 63°49′35″N
22°40′55″W / 63.82639°N 22.68194°WCoordinates: 63°49′35″N
22°40′55″W / 63.82639°N 22.68194°W |
OWNER |
SRHC |
STATUS |
Completed |
FUEL |
Geothermal |
TECHNOLOGY |
Steam turbine |
TURBINES |
2 |
INSTALLED CAPACITY |
100 MW |
MAXIMUM CAPACITY |
150 MW |
COMMISSIONED |
May 2006 |