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| decommissioned = | cost = | owner = Stanwell Corporation | operator = | th_fuel_primary = Natural gas | th_fuel_secondary = Landfill gas | ps_units_operational = | ps_units_manu_model = | th_combined_cycle = Yes | ps_electrical_capacity = 385 | website = }} The Swanbank Power Stations are located in Swanbank within South East Queensland, Australia and consist of the highly efficient gas-fired Swanbank E Power Station and the smaller gas-fired Swanbank C Power Station. The coal for Swanbank B came from coalfields in South-East Queensland, including New Acland Mine, by road. Water is supplied from Lake Moogerah and the Western Corridor Recycled Water Scheme began to supply the power station with water in August 2007. ==Components== Swanbank A was commissioned in 1967 with six steam turbines, powered by coal. Swanbank A Station, which was one of the coal burning stations, was decommissioned in August 2005. The three high, concrete smoke stacks were collapsed on 20 August 2006. All three were collapsed at the same time with a 10 second delay between each stack. The deconstruction and demolition project, undertaken by Trio Industries, was scheduled to be completed in February 2007. Swanbank B was commissioned in 1971 with four steam turbines, powered by coal. Four units of Swanbank B were decommissioned in April 2010, June 2010, 2011, and May 2012, due to the plant reaching the end of its operational life. The coal for Swanbank B came from coalfields in South-East Queensland, including New Acland Mine, by road. Water is supplied from Lake Moogerah and the Western Corridor Recycled Water Scheme began to supply the power station with water in August 2007.〔 Swanbank C was a small gas turbine generating plant, rated at . It had two Rolls-Royce Avon gas generators discharging into a power turbine which drove the generator. Middle Ridge Power Station was a similar design, with four gas generators discharging into two power turbines, one on each end of the electrical generator. It was commissioned in 1969. Swanbank D was a small open cycle gas turbine. Delivering only , it was commissioned in 2000 but only ran for a few years. The much larger and more efficient Swanbank E was commissioned in 2002 with a single combined cycle gas turbine. The gas turbine of Swanbank E was the largest of its type at the time of its commissioning.〔 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「Swanbank Power Station」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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