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Svartsengi Power Station

Svartsengi Power Station
Iceland Geothermal facility.jpg
The Blue Lagoon with the power station in the background.
Svartsengi Power Station is located in Iceland
Svartsengi Power Station
Location of Svartsengi Power Station in Iceland
Country Iceland
Location Keflavík
Coordinates 63°52′43″N 22°25′58″W / 63.87861°N 22.43278°W / 63.87861; -22.43278Coordinates: 63°52′43″N 22°25′58″W / 63.87861°N 22.43278°W / 63.87861; -22.43278
Status Operational
Commission date 1976 - 2008
Owner(s) HS Orka
Geothermal power station
Type 5 shallow steam wells
8 steam and brine wells
150 ha (370 acres)
Min. source temp. 101 °C (210 °F)
Wells 13
Max. well depth 1,800 m (5,900 ft)
Power generation
Units operational 11 x 50 MW
Make and model 6
Thermal capacity 150 MW
Nameplate capacity 75 MW

The Svartsengi Power Station (Svartsengi (Icelandic pronunciation: ​[ˈsvar̥sˌɛi̯ɲcɪ]); "black meadow" in Icelandic) is a geothermal power plant, which is located in the Svartsengi geothermal field, about four km north of Grindavík, approximately 20 km SE of Keflavík International Airport and 45 km from Reykjavík. The electric power station was built in 1976 by the subsidiary of Alterra Power, HS Orka and it was the world´s first geothermal power plant for electric power generation and hot water production for district heating.

The power station, which consists of an area of 150 ha, was constructed in six sequent phases (finished in 2008), in each phase they built a new power plant, so the generation capacity increased to 150 MWth for the district heating and the nameplate capacity to 75 MW for electricity power.

Since the Svartsengi Power Station is the only heating system for the local district on the Reykjanes Peninsula, which pipes hot geothermal water to more than 21,000 households, it is considered one of the most important heating plants.

This Geothermal Power Plant does not only produce hot water and energy, it also produces spin-offs: One of these side product is one of Iceland´s popular bathing resort, the Blue Lagoon and another spin off is the first renewable methanol plant Carbon Recycling International.

In the beginning 1976, the Svartsengi Geothermal Power Plant was completely liquid-dominated, but it changed into a liquid dominated with a steam cap geothermal system.

Today, it consists of 13 production boreholes connected to the six plants, eight of those wells are producing a mixture of steam and brine and the other five are shallow dry steam wells.

It also possesses one of the largest Supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) in Iceland with the P-CIM monitors and the 50 substations, which include hot water/ cold water/ electricity distribution systems and 11 turbines and generators.


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