Lerwick Power Station
Lerwick Power Station | |
---|---|
Country | Scotland, United Kingdom |
Location | Gremista, Lerwick, Shetland |
Coordinates | 60°10′01″N 1°09′53″W / 60.1670°N 1.1646°W |
Status | Operational |
Commission date | May 27, 1953 |
Operator | Scottish and Southern Energy |
Thermal power station | |
Primary fuel | Diesel fuel |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 6 x 6 MW 2 x 8 MW 1 x 12 MW 2.1 MW |
Make and model | Mirrlees, Bickerton & Day diesel generators Pielstick engines Wärtsilä engine |
Nameplate capacity | 66 MW |
External links | |
Commons | Related media on Commons |
The main power supply for Shetland is provided by Lerwick Power Station, located in Gremista, 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) northwest of Lerwick town centre. This is the principal source of electrical energy for Shetland.[1] However, as of 2015, about 20 MWe is provided by the Sullom Voe Terminal power station which comprises 4 x 23 MWe Gas Turbines, the future of which is uncertain.[citation needed]
Opened on 27 May 1953, the station is fueled with diesel and generates 66 MW of power.[1]
Equipment
[edit]Originally the facility had six 6 MWe Mirrlees diesel generator K Major sets (some of which have been decommissioned); two 8 MWe French Pielstick engines were added in 1983 and a further Finnish 12 MWe Wärtsilä (originally a Stork Werkspoor design) engine was commissioned in 1994. A waste-heat recovery system applied to the exhaust of the Wartsila only produces super-heated steam which runs a 2.1 MW WH Allen turbine, thus making this set a combined cycle. Two standby gas turbine generator units, each with a capacity of 5 MW, were installed in containers outside the existing buildings to augment peak output. The plant is operated by Scottish and Southern Energy (SSE).[1]
Load balancing
[edit]The growth of output from wind turbines in Shetland has increased instability in the local grid (which is not connected to the national grid on mainland Scotland). SSE installed a 1 MW sodium–sulfur battery in a nearby building to ameliorate the peak loads;[1] however, due to safety concerns, the sodium-sulfur battery was removed prior to commissioning and the energy storage building was reconfigured to accommodate 3 MWh of advanced lead-acid batteries.[2]
Replacement plan
[edit]There are proposals to replace the power station at a new greenfield site north of the existing one. Planning permission has been granted for the development; however, the decision to proceed has been delayed by the proposed Shetland HVDC Connection, which, depending on how it is implemented, may make such a station redundant, or only required as standby, which would affect the type of plant chosen.
Lerwick District Heating
[edit]There is an adjacent, but district, heating network. See Lerwick District Heating and Energy Recovery Plant. However, for a variety of reasons the rejected heat has never been used as a heat source for the network. This is unlikely to happen with the existing power station because it will be closed soon.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Lerwick Power Station". Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
- ^ sandcelectric (15 July 2015), S&C installs a 3MWh Energy Storage System on the Shetland Islands, retrieved 21 March 2016