Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4696387> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 62 of
62
with 100 triples per page.
- Q4696387 subject Q13278795.
- Q4696387 subject Q7020414.
- Q4696387 subject Q8321567.
- Q4696387 subject Q8391428.
- Q4696387 subject Q8414047.
- Q4696387 subject Q8575442.
- Q4696387 abstract "The Ahtme Power Plant (Estonian: Ahtme soojuselektrijaam) was an oil shale-fired power plant in Ahtme, Kohtla-Järve, Estonia. It was owned by VKG Soojus, a subsidiary of Viru Keemia Grupp. Until the end 2012, it supplies with heat Ahtme district of Kohtla-Järve and Jõhvi.Construction of the Ahtme Power Plant started during World War II as a part of the larger oil-shale processing complex. The plant was designed by AtomEnergoProekt. The first generator of the plant was commissioned on 28 October 1951 with the second generator following at the end of the same year. The first generator had a capacity of 22.5 MW. At the beginning the plant used Riley Stoker boilers and General Electric generators; however, boilers developed for the pulverized firing of coal and lignite were not fit to work on pulverized oil shale. The planned capacity of 72.5 MW which made it the most powerful power plant in Estonia until the commissioning of the Narva Power Plants, was reached only at the end of the 1950s.Originally the main task of the plant was to provide electricity and heat to the nearby Ahtme oil shale mine and other oil shale industries. Later it started to heat Ahtme and Jõhvi towns. After commissioning of the Narva Power Plants the importance of the Ahtme Power Plant as an electricity producer decreased and it was mainly utilized as a heating plant. Correspondingly, the electrical capacity of the plant was decreased. Since 2000, the plant has installed capacity of 30 MW of electricity and 370 MW of heat. It is equipped with three Barnaul BKZ-75-39F middle-pressure boilers and two Bukkau type boilers, one 20 MW Sverdlovsk and one 10 MW VEB Görlitzer Maschinenbau AT-25-2 turbine.Before closure of the Ahtme oil shale mine, oil shale for the power plant was supplied from there. As a start up fuel, the plant used shale oil. Its cooling water was piped from Lake Konsu, located 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) southeast. Oil shale ash was dumped in the nearby ash field. Ash was transported in closed the system by pumping ash and water mixture to the depository field. Closure of the ash landfill was supported from the European Union Cohesion Fund. Part of oil shale ash was used to produce cinder blocks at the Ahtme building materials factory.On 1 January 2013 the plant was closed due to EU environmental regulations. In March 2011, a 100 MW natural gas-fired boiler house for peak and back-up loads was commissioned, which continues operating after closure of the old power plant.".
- Q4696387 buildingStartDate "1951".
- Q4696387 buildingStartYear "1951".
- Q4696387 closingDate "2013-01-01".
- Q4696387 country Q191.
- Q4696387 location Q201391.
- Q4696387 openingYear "1953".
- Q4696387 operator Q3313991.
- Q4696387 status "O".
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q1326670.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q13278795.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q1553328.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q156267.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q191.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q201391.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q211059.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q221378.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q24489.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q3081242.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q3313991.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q362.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q40858.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q458.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q54173.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q6476486.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q7020414.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q7081465.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q757657.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q8321567.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q8391428.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q8414047.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q846996.
- Q4696387 wikiPageWikiLink Q8575442.
- Q4696387 commissioned "1953".
- Q4696387 constructionBegan "1951".
- Q4696387 country Q191.
- Q4696387 decommissioned "2013-01-01".
- Q4696387 location "Ahtme, Kohtla-Järve".
- Q4696387 name "Ahtme Power Plant".
- Q4696387 operator Q3313991.
- Q4696387 status "O".
- Q4696387 point "59.31388888888889 27.464444444444446".
- Q4696387 type Place.
- Q4696387 type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Q4696387 type Infrastructure.
- Q4696387 type Location.
- Q4696387 type Place.
- Q4696387 type PowerStation.
- Q4696387 type Thing.
- Q4696387 type SpatialThing.
- Q4696387 type Q159719.
- Q4696387 comment "The Ahtme Power Plant (Estonian: Ahtme soojuselektrijaam) was an oil shale-fired power plant in Ahtme, Kohtla-Järve, Estonia. It was owned by VKG Soojus, a subsidiary of Viru Keemia Grupp. Until the end 2012, it supplies with heat Ahtme district of Kohtla-Järve and Jõhvi.Construction of the Ahtme Power Plant started during World War II as a part of the larger oil-shale processing complex. The plant was designed by AtomEnergoProekt.".
- Q4696387 label "Ahtme Power Plant".
- Q4696387 lat "59.31388888888889".
- Q4696387 long "27.464444444444446".
- Q4696387 name "Ahtme Power Plant".