Vilnius Combined Heat and Power Plant
| Vilnius CHP Plant | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Official name | Vilniaus termofikacinė elektrinė | 
| Country | Lithuania | 
| Location | Vilnius | 
| Coordinates | 54°40′4″N 25°9′25″E / 54.66778°N 25.15694°E | 
| Status | Decommissioned | 
| Construction began | 1976 | 
| Commission date | 1983 | 
| Decommission date | 2016 | 
| Owner | Ignitis Group | 
| Thermal power station | |
| Primary fuel | Natural gas | 
| Secondary fuel | Mazut | 
| Cogeneration? | Yes | 
| Power generation | |
| Units operational | 2 × 180 MW | 
| Nameplate capacity | 360 MW | 
| External links | |
| Website | https://ignitisgamyba.lt/ | 
| Commons | Related media on Commons | 
Vilnius Combined Heat and Power Plant or Vilnius Power Plant-3 was a power plant in Vilnius, Lithuania.
Vilnius Combined Heat and Power Plant has a capacity of 603 MW heating power and 360 MW electric power.[1] It was considered the most polluting electric power plant in Lithuania.[2] As a consequence, Vilnius Combined Heat and Power Plant was closed in 2016.[3] In 2016 a new waste-to-energy Vilnius Biofuel Power Plant was built next to the CHP plant.
In July 2024, equipment from Vilnius Power Plant-3 was transferred to Ukraine to aid rebuilding energy infrastructure in war-torn regions.[4][5]
See also
References
- ^ Vilniaus-energija.lt
- ^ "Kurios Lietuvos elektrinės labiausiai teršia aplinką?" (in Lithuanian). delfi.lt. 2012-10-30. Retrieved 2012-10-31.
- ^ ""Lietuvos energija" vertina galimybes atnaujinti trečiąją Vilniaus elektrinę" (in Lithuanian). Verslo žinios. 2019-05-09. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
- ^ Lithuania hands over equipment from Vilnius thermal power plant to Ukraine
- ^ "Ignitis Gamyba is giving Ukraine critically important equipment from Vilnius CHP 3 | Ignitis grupė". ignitisgrupe.lt. Retrieved 2024-07-17.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vilnius Power Plant-3.