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nga+awa+purua+power+station Latitude and Longitude:

38°36′51″S 176°11′02″E / 38.61417°S 176.18389°E / -38.61417; 176.18389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nga Awa Purua Power Station
CountryNew Zealand
Locationnorth of Taupō
Coordinates 38°36′51″S 176°11′02″E / 38.61417°S 176.18389°E / -38.61417; 176.18389
StatusOperational
Construction beganMay 2008 (May 2008)
Commission dateMay 2010 (May 2010)
Construction cost NZ$430 million
Owner(s) Mercury Energy / Tauhara North No. 2 Trust joint venture
Operator(s) Mercury Energy
Geothermal power station
Type Flash steam
Wells10
Max. well depth2,500 m (8,200 ft)
Power generation
Units operational1× 140 MW
Nameplate capacity140 MW
Capacity factor90%
Annual net output1100 GWh
External links
Website Nga Awa Purua - Mercury Energy

Nga Awa Purua, also known as Rotokawa II, is a geothermal power station located near Taupō in New Zealand. The project was developed by Mighty River Power (now Mercury Energy). [1] Nga Awa Purua is New Zealand's second largest geothermal power station [2] and the steam turbine is the largest geothermal turbine in the world. [3]

The power station is a joint venture between Mercury Energy (75%) and the Tauhara North No 2 Trust (25%), who represent about 800 owners affiliated to Ngati Tahu. [4] The $430 million project first generated electricity on 18 January 2010, [5] and was officially opened by Prime Minister John Key on 15 May 2010. [6]

The Rotokawa Power Station is nearby.

Electricity Generation at Nga Awa Purua.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Geothermal Generation". Mercury Energy.
  2. ^ "Mighty River committed to geothermal development". Scoop. 6 March 2008.
  3. ^ "Rotokawa II/Nga Awa Purua Geothermal Power Plant, New Zealand". renewable-energy.com.
  4. ^ Bradley, Grant (9 August 2011). "Underground resources ready to be tapped". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 12 August 2011.
  5. ^ "New power station adds to grid capacity" (Press release). Mighty River Power. 18 January 2010.
  6. ^ "Prime Minister opens geothermal power station". TVNZ. 15 May 2010.



nga+awa+purua+power+station Latitude and Longitude:

38°36′51″S 176°11′02″E / 38.61417°S 176.18389°E / -38.61417; 176.18389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nga Awa Purua Power Station
CountryNew Zealand
Locationnorth of Taupō
Coordinates 38°36′51″S 176°11′02″E / 38.61417°S 176.18389°E / -38.61417; 176.18389
StatusOperational
Construction beganMay 2008 (May 2008)
Commission dateMay 2010 (May 2010)
Construction cost NZ$430 million
Owner(s) Mercury Energy / Tauhara North No. 2 Trust joint venture
Operator(s) Mercury Energy
Geothermal power station
Type Flash steam
Wells10
Max. well depth2,500 m (8,200 ft)
Power generation
Units operational1× 140 MW
Nameplate capacity140 MW
Capacity factor90%
Annual net output1100 GWh
External links
Website Nga Awa Purua - Mercury Energy

Nga Awa Purua, also known as Rotokawa II, is a geothermal power station located near Taupō in New Zealand. The project was developed by Mighty River Power (now Mercury Energy). [1] Nga Awa Purua is New Zealand's second largest geothermal power station [2] and the steam turbine is the largest geothermal turbine in the world. [3]

The power station is a joint venture between Mercury Energy (75%) and the Tauhara North No 2 Trust (25%), who represent about 800 owners affiliated to Ngati Tahu. [4] The $430 million project first generated electricity on 18 January 2010, [5] and was officially opened by Prime Minister John Key on 15 May 2010. [6]

The Rotokawa Power Station is nearby.

Electricity Generation at Nga Awa Purua.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Geothermal Generation". Mercury Energy.
  2. ^ "Mighty River committed to geothermal development". Scoop. 6 March 2008.
  3. ^ "Rotokawa II/Nga Awa Purua Geothermal Power Plant, New Zealand". renewable-energy.com.
  4. ^ Bradley, Grant (9 August 2011). "Underground resources ready to be tapped". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 12 August 2011.
  5. ^ "New power station adds to grid capacity" (Press release). Mighty River Power. 18 January 2010.
  6. ^ "Prime Minister opens geothermal power station". TVNZ. 15 May 2010.



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