List of power stations in Croatia
Appearance
All power stations in Croatia are owned and operated by Hrvatska elektroprivreda (HEP), the national power company. As of 2015[update], HEP operates 26 hydroelectric, 4 thermal and 3 cogenerating power plants with the total installed electrical power of 3.654 MW.[1]
Hydroelectric
[edit]Station | Location | Coordinates | Capacity (MW) |
---|---|---|---|
Čakovec Hydroelectric Power Plant[2] | Orehovica | 76 | |
Dubrava Hydroelectric Power Plant[3] | Donja Dubrava | 76 | |
Rijeka Hydroelectric Power Plant[4] | Rijeka | 36,8 | |
Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant[5] | Ogulin | 55,5 | |
Ozalj Hydroelectric Power Plant[6] | Ozalj | 5,5 | |
Lešće Hydroelectric Power Plant[7] | Generalski Stol | 42,29 | |
Krka River Hydroelectric Power Plant[8] | Oklaj | 36,64 | |
Peruća Hydroelectric Power Plant[9] | Satrić | 60 | |
Orlovac Hydroelectric Power Plant[10] | Ruda | 249 | |
Đale Hydroelectric Power Plant[11] | Trilj | 40,8 | |
Kraljevac Hydroelectric Power Plant[12] | Zadvarje | 46,4 | |
Zakučac Hydroelectric Power Plant[13] | Omiš | 486 | |
Dubrovnik Hydroelectric Power Plant[14] | Dubrovnik | 218 | |
Varaždin Hydroelectric Power Plant[15] | Sračinec | 94 | |
Velebit Pumped Storage Power Plant[16] | Velebit | 276 | |
Senj Hydroelectric Power Plant[17] | Senj | 216 | |
Vinodol Hydroelectric Power Plant[18] | Vinodol | 110 |
The Jaruga Hydroelectric Power Plant is the first commercial hydro power plant in Europe, and the second oldest in the world. It started with operation on 28 August 1895 at 20:00, two days after the Adams Power Plant on the Niagara Falls,[19][20][21] and in 1903 it was moved to its current location.[22][23]
Other thermal
[edit]Name | Location | Coordinates | Fuel | Capacity (MWe) | Operational | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plomin Power Station | Plomin | 45°08′12″N 14°09′46″E / 45.1366904°N 14.1627717°E | Coal | 330 | 1970–2000 | 340 metres tall chimney. |
Rijeka Thermal Power Station | Bakar | 45°17′11″N 14°31′12″E / 45.2863612°N 14.5200956°E | Oil | 320 | 1978– | |
Sisak Thermal Power Station | Sisak | Oil | 420 | 1970–1976 | ||
Velika 1 Geothermal Power Plant | Ciglena | 45°51′24″N 16°56′42″E / 45.8566299°N 16.9450757°E | Geothermal | 17 | 2019– | Temporarily ceased operations in early 2022.[24] |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Basic Data". hep.hr. Hrvatska elektroprivreda. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
- ^ HE Čakovec, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Dubrava, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Rijeka, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Gojak, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Ozalj, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Lešće, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE na Krki, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Peruća, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Orlovac, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Đale, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Kraljevac, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Zakučac, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Dubrovnik, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Varaždin, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ "RHE Velebit, HEP Proizvodnja". Archived from the original on 2014-12-23. Retrieved 2010-02-09.
- ^ HE Senj, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ HE Senj, HEP Proizvodnja
- ^ Marko Delimar; Josip Moser; Aleksandar Szabo (2007-08-03). "First AC Power Systems in Croatia". 2007 IEEE Conference on the History of Electric Power Schedule/Program. IEEE. Archived from the original on 2008-05-06. Retrieved 2010-04-03.
Marko Delimar; Josip Moser; Aleksandar Szabo (August 2007). "First AC Power Systems in Croatia". 2007 IEEE Conference on the History of Electric Power. Croatian Scientific Bibliography - Bibliographic record number: 342396. - ^ Delimar, Marko; Szabo, Aleksandar; Lugaric, Luka (2007). "First Integrated Electric Power System in Croatia". EUROCON 2007 - the International Conference on "Computer as a Tool". pp. 2648–2651. doi:10.1109/EURCON.2007.4400640. ISBN 978-1-4244-0812-2. S2CID 43399973.
- ^ "HEP - history". HEP. Archived from the original on 2016-06-18. Retrieved 2010-04-03.
- ^ http://www.ieeeghn.org/wiki/images/7/79/Hydro_Power_Plants_in_Croatia.pdf Archived 2014-08-21 at the Wayback Machine [bare URL PDF]
- ^ "HE na Krki - Krka River Hydro Power Plants". Hydroelectric Power Plants in Croatia. HEP. Archived from the original on 2009-10-05. Retrieved 2010-04-03.
- ^ "Najveća geotermalna elektrana u Hrvatskoj prestala s radom" [The largest geothermal power plant in Croatia has ceased operations]. Jutarnji list. 18 February 2022. Retrieved 20 April 2022.