TrønderEnergi
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Company type | Municipal owned |
---|---|
Industry | Power |
Founded | 1950 |
Headquarters | Trondheim, Norway |
Area served | South Trøndelag, Norway |
Key people | Ståle Gjersvold (CEO) Per Kristian Skjærvik Chairman |
Revenue | NOK 844 million (2006) |
NOK 320 million (2006) | |
NOK 183 million (2006) | |
Number of employees | 500 (2011) |
Website | tronderenergi |
TrønderEnergi is a power company based in Trondheim Municipality, Norway that operates hydroelectric power plants and wind farms,[1] as well as the power grid in the southern parts of Trøndelag county. The grid encompasses eleven municipalities, and current grid to 120,000 customers. Total electricity production is 3.0 terawatt-hours (11 PJ).[when?]
It also owns the Ugandan Tronder Power Ltd., which in 2008 built and since then operated Bugoye Power Station in southwestern Uganda.[1] This with financial aid from the Norwegian stateowned equity company and Bugoye co-owner Norfund.
The company is entirely owned Kommunal Landspensjonskasse (13.3%) and the following 19 municipalities in Trøndelag: Frøya (2.49%), Heim (4.85%), Hitra (2.69%), Holtålen (1.34%), Indre Fosen (8%), Malvik (2.96%), Melhus (13.34%), Midtre Gauldal (3.17%), Oppdal (3.95%), Orkland (16.94%), Osen (1.04%), Rennebu (0.07%), Selbu (1.43%), Skaun (2.2%), Stjørdal (0.18%), Trondheim (9.13%), Tydal (0.16%), Ørland (7.69%), and Åfjord Municipality (5.04%).[2]
History
[edit]The company was founded in 1950 as an inter-municipal agency named Sør-Trøndelag Elektrisitetsverk, later changing its name to Sør-Trøndelag Kraftselskap and finally to the limited company TrønderEnergi AS. In 2001 it merged with Melhus Energi. The same year TrønderEnergi bought 49% of the power company Nordmøre Energiverk. In 2010, it merged with Trondheim Energi Nett AS.
Power plants
[edit]- Bessakerfjellet windfarm
- Eidsfoss power plant
- Frøya windfarm
- Håen power plant
- Lofoss power plant
- Mørre power plant
- Nunelva power plant
- Sama power plant
- Simsfossen power plant
- Skjærlivatn power plant
- Sokna power plant
- Svartelva power plant
- Søa power plant
- Valsneset windfarm
- Vik power plant
References
[edit]- ^ a b "TronderEnergi AS". GlobalData. 2021.
- ^ "Eiere" (in Norwegian). TrønderEnergi. Retrieved 2024-11-23.