The Kislaya Guba Tidal Power Station is an experimental project in Kislaya Guba, Russia.
Kislaya Guba Tidal Power Station | |
---|---|
Country | Russia |
Location | Kislaya Guba |
Coordinates | 69°22′37″N 33°04′33″E / 69.37694°N 33.07583°E |
Status | Operational |
Commission date | 1968 |
Owner | RusHydro |
Tidal power station | |
Type | Tidal barrage |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 1 × 0.2 MW 1 × 1.5 MW |
Nameplate capacity | 1.7 MW |
External links | |
Commons | Related media on Commons |
The station is the world's 4th largest[1] tidal power plant in operation since the Annapolis Royal Generating Station ceased operation.[2] With an output capacity of 1.7 megawatts (2,300 hp). Station began operating in 1968, but was later shut down for 10 years until December 2004, when funding resumed. The old 0.4 megawatts (540 hp) French-built generation unit was dismantled. In 2004 was installed first new 0.2 megawatts (270 hp) generation unit, and in 2007 – second, 1.5 megawatts (2,000 hp). The site was originally chosen because the long and deep fjord had a fairly narrow outlet to the sea which could easily be dammed for the project. There are plans for two larger scale projects based on this design near Mezen, on the White Sea and Tugur on the Sea of Okhotsk.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Neill, Simon P.; Angeloudis, Athanasios; Robins, Peter E.; Walkington, Ian; Ward, Sophie L.; Masters, Ian; Lewis, Matt J.; Piano, Marco; Avdis, Alexandros; Piggott, Matthew D.; Aggidis, George A.; Evans, Paul; Adcock, Thomas A.A; Židonis, Audrius; Ahmadian, Reza; Falconer, Roger A. (May 2018). "Tidal range energy resource and optimization - Past perspectives and future challenges". Renewable Energy. 127: 763–778. doi:10.1016/j.renene.2018.05.007. hdl:10044/1/73251.
- ^ Paul Withers. "Nova Scotia Power to pull plug on tidal station, seeks $25M from ratepayers". CBC News. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
- ^ Latest Developments