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The Castle Peak Power Station () is the largest coal-fired power station in Hong Kong, China. It is located at Tap Shek Kok in Tuen Mun District. It was commissioned in 1982 with its newest generation unit installed in 1990. The station consists of four 350 MW and four 677 MW generating units, with auxiliary facilities.〔 It is one of the three power stations CLP operates in Hong Kong, totalling to 6,908 MW of installed capacity. The station was built for CLP with a 40% stake (60% by ExxonMobil). In 2007 Castle Peak burned 9 million tonnes of coal of which, according to CLP, 4.6 million tonnes was low-sulphur coal from Indonesia. The power station has been undertaking a range of programmes to improve emission performance, including refurbishing burners to reduce emission of nitrogen oxide, SCR (Selective Catalyst Reduction) and BOFA (Boosted Over Fire Air) has been installed, as has an FGD for sulphur removal. This power station is a major contributor to non-motor-traffic pollution in Hong Kong. On 19 November 2013, CLP Group and China Southern Power Grid Company (CSG) decided to spend HK$24 billion together to acquire Exxon's 60% stake in Castle Peak Power. After transaction, CLP holds 70% stake while CSG holds remaining 30% stake.〔(Stronger relationship up north set to spark expansion )〕 == See also == * Electricity sector in Hong Kong * List of power stations in Hong Kong * List of coal power stations * List of largest power stations in the world 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Castle Peak Power Station」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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