Mishor Rotem Power Station

Mishor Rotem Power Station
Mishor Rotem Power Station
Mishor Rotem Power Station is located in Israel
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Location of Mishor Rotem Power Station
Country Israel
Location Mishor Rotem, Dimona
Coordinates 31°03′19″N 35°11′04″E / 31.05528°N 35.18444°E / 31.05528; 35.18444Coordinates: 31°03′19″N 35°11′04″E / 31.05528°N 35.18444°E / 31.05528; 35.18444
Status Operational
Construction began 1987
Commission date 1989
Construction cost US$30 million
Operator(s) Rotem Amfert
Developer(s) PAMA
Power station information
Primary fuel Oil shale
Turbine manufacturer(s) Alstom
Power generation information
Installed capacity 13 MW
As of November 1, 2010

The Mishor Rotem Power Station was an oil shale-fired power station in the area of Mishor Rotem, Israel. It was closed in April, 2011. Israel Chemicals, owner of the site, announced that it was closing the plant because it made negligible profits and because it was better to close the plant rather than cause future damage to the environment.[1] Israel Chemicals plans a new gas-fired power station at the same site.

History

The oil shale plant was first commissioned as 1978 as a test pilot plant, with an installed capacity of 0.1 MW. Between 1982 and 1986, the PAMA, a subsidiary of Israel Electric Corporation, established and operated a 1 MW pilot plant. After a R&D program was carried out and funded by PAMA and the Israel Ministry of National Infrastructures with an investment of approximately $30 million, the 13 MW demonstration plant was completed in 1989. The generated power was sold to the Israel Electric Corporation, and low-pressure steam was supplied to an adjacent industrial complex. After 2000, the power station was operated by Rotem Amfert Negev, a subsidiary of Israel Chemicals.[2]

The power station required approximately half a million tons of oil shale annually, which was transported from a nearby open-pit mine. A large part of the ash generated in the process was used in products such as cat litter. Most of the ash product was distributed in Europe under the commercial name Alganite.[2]

See also

References


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