The Bihai Power Plant (traditional Chinese: 碧海發電廠; simplified Chinese: 碧海发电厂; pinyin: Bìhǎi Fādiànchǎng) is a hydroelectric power plant in Xiulin Township, Hualien County, Taiwan.

Bihai Power Plant
碧海發電廠
Map
CountryRepublic of China
LocationXiulin, Hualien County
Coordinates24°20′09″N 121°40′36″E / 24.33583°N 121.67667°E / 24.33583; 121.67667
StatusOperational
Construction began2001
Commission date10 December 2011[1]
Construction costNT$ 16.5 billion
Owner(s)Taipower
Operator(s)Taipower
Thermal power station
Primary fuelWater
Power generation
Units operational1
Make and modelTatung Company, BHEL[2]
Nameplate capacity61.2 MW
Annual net output237 GWh
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

History edit

The geological survey and exploratory drilling for the project were started in 1996 and construction was started in 2001. After 15 years of preparatory and construction work, the power plant went into commercial operation on 10 December 2011.[3]

Dam and reservoir edit

The power plant was established from the construction of concrete gravity dam at an altitude of 545 meters along the Hoping River basin in Hualien County. The dam at (24°19′59.91″N 121°36′25.48″E / 24.3333083°N 121.6070778°E / 24.3333083; 121.6070778 (Bihai Dam)) created a reservoir with a capacity of 635,000 m3. An intake valve was built connecting the dam with a 6,549 meter long headrace tunnel to Bihai Power Plant located at the downstream side at an altitude of 100 meters where a vertical Pelton turbine of 61.2 MW is installed.

Generation edit

The power plant is expected to generate 237 GWh every year to residents of Hualien County to relieve the previous burden for Taipower to import electricity from Mingtan Pumped Storage Hydro Power Plant in Nantou County and Maanshan Nuclear Power Plant in Pingtung County which was very costly. The 18 hours of daily water capture and storage will generate enough electricity to supply the six hours of peak load in the region.

Safety edit

The power plant will open the floodgate to release excessive water during high river intensity to prevent the buildup of sediment.

Financing edit

The project costed NT$ 16.5 billion.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Taiwan power companyConstruction Project". Taipower.com.tw. Archived from the original on 8 May 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  2. ^ "Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd". Bhel.com. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  3. ^ "Taiwan Today - Hualien hydropower plant ready to operate in October". Archived from the original on 27 May 2014. Retrieved 23 August 2014.