Kawęczyn Heat Plant
52°16′5″N 21°7′43″E / 52.26806°N 21.12861°E / 52.26806; 21.12861Status Operational Operator(s) PGNiG Thermal power station Primary fuel Coal Thermal capacity 512 MW External links Website [1] Commons Related media on Commons
[edit on Wikidata]
The Kawęczyn Heat Plant is a coal-fired heat plant at osiedle Kawęczyn in Rembertów district of Warsaw, Poland. It was operated by Vattenfall but their Polish operations were taken over by Polish energy company PGNiG in 2012.[1]
The heat plant has an installed thermal capacity of 512 MW. It has one 300-metre (980 ft) high flue gas stack, which is one of Poland's tallest free standing structures.
See also
- List of towers
References
- ^ PGNiG Termika. "Our Plants". PGNiG Termika (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-18.
PGNiG TERMIKA owns five plants: HP Kawęczyn, CHP Pruszków, CHP Siekierki, CHP Żerań and HP Wola. They produce approximately 401 million GJ of heat which covers 70% of the demand in Warsaw and 60% in Pruszków, Piastów and Michałowice.
External links
- www.skyscraperpage.com
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elektrociepłownia Kawęczyn.
- v
- t
- e
Supertall self-supporting chimneys (+300 meters in height)
- Armstrong Power Plant
- Azerbaijan Thermal Power Plant
- Bełchatów Power Station
- Berezovskaya GRES
- Bishkek TEC
- Boxberg Power Station
- Buschhaus Power Station
- Cardinal Power Plant
- Chvaletice Power Station
- Clifty Creek Power Plant
- Conemaugh Generating Station
- Cuciurgan power station
- Cumberland Fossil Plant
- Duvha Power Station
- Ekibastuz GRES-1
- Endesa Termic
- GRES-2 Power Station
- Gusinoozyorskaya GRES
- Hal B. Wansley Power Plant
- Harllee Branch Power Plant
- Harrison Power Station Scrubber
- Harrison Power Station
- Hayden Smelter
- HKW Chemnitz-Nord
- Homer City Generating Station
- Inco Superstack
- Independence Power Plant
- Jänschwalde Power Station
- Jaworzno Power Station
- Thermal power station Kakanj
- Kemerköy power station
- Kennecott Smokestack
- Kingston Fossil Plant
- Kirishi Power Station
- Kostromskaya Power Station
- Kozienice Power Station
- Kyger Creek Power Plant
- Lippendorf Power Station (chimney dismantled)
- Maritsa Iztok-3
- Marl-Chemiepark Power Station (dismantled)
- Mitchell Power Plant
- Mountaineer Power Plant
- Novaky Power Plant
- Novo-Angrenskaya Power Plant
- Orot Rabin
- Permskaya GRES
- Phoenix Copper Smelter
- Pirdop copper smelter and refinery
- Plant Bowen Coal
- Pleasants Power Station
- Plomin Power Station
- Primorskaya GRES
- Provence Power Station
- Prunéřov Power Station
- Reftinskaya GRES
- Robert W Scherer Power Plant
- Rockport Power Plant
- Romag-Termo Power Plant
- Ryazan Power Station
- Rybnik Power Station
- Chimney for Units B-E of Scholven Power Station (also used as electricity pylon)
- Chimney for Units F-H of Scholven Power Station
- Secunda CTL
- STEAG Power Plant Herne
- STEAG Power Plant Walsum
- Syrdarya Power Plant
- Teruel Power Plant
- Kharkiv TEC-5 (ceased operation)
- Thierbach Power Station (dismantled)
- Tobolsk TEC
- Trepça Lead Smelter
- Trbovlje Power Station
- Troitskaya TEC (under construction)
- Tušimice Power Station
- Ugljevik Power Plant
- Vojany Power Station (height reduced)
- Volzhskaya TEC-2
- Vuhlehirska TES
- Kawęczyn Heat Plant
- Westerholt Power Station (demolished)
- W. H. Sammis Power Plant
- White Bluff Power Plant
- Widows Creek Fossil Plant
- Zaporizhzhia thermal power station
- Zuevska TES
This article about a power station is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article about a building or structure in Warsaw is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e