Iron Gate II Hydroelectric Power Station
Iron Gate II Hydroelectric Power Station | |
---|---|
Location | Gogoşu, Mehedinţi County, Romania Mihajlovac, Bor District, Serbia |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Construction began | 1977 |
Opening date | 1984 |
Dam and spillways | |
Impounds | Danube River |
Height | 35 m (115 ft) |
Length | 412 m (1,352 ft)[1] |
Reservoir | |
Creates | Iron Gates II Reservoir |
Total capacity | 0.6 km3 (0.14 cu mi) |
Catchment area | 579,200 km2 (223,600 sq mi) |
Surface area | 52 km2 (20 sq mi) |
Power station | |
Turbines | Romania: 10 × 32 MW Serbia: 10 × 27 MW |
Installed capacity | Romania: 321 MW Serbia: 270 MW |
Annual generation | Romania: 1.3 TWh Serbia: 1.31 TWh |
The Iron Gate II (Romanian: Porţile de Fier II, Serbian: Ђердап II, Đerdap II) is a large dam on the Danube River, between Romania and Serbia.
The project started in 1977 as a joint-venture between the governments of Romania and Yugoslavia for the construction of large dam on the Danube River which would serve both countries. At the time of completion in 1984 the dam had 16 units generating a total of 432 MW, divided equally between the two countries at 216 MW each.
The Romanian part of the power station was modernised and another 2 units were installed; the nominal capacity of the 10 units was increased from 27 MW to 32 MW thus having an installed capacity of 321 MW. The Romanian side of the power station produces approximately 1.3 TWh per annum.
The Serbian part of the power station currently has 10 units with a nominal capacity of 27 MW each and a total power generation capacity of 270 MW.[2] The Serbian side of the power station produces approximately 1.31 TWh per annum. At the celebration ceremony for the 27 years since the power station's deployment it was announced that production in 2011 reached 1.46 TWh despite bad weather conditions.[3]
Current total power generation capacity of the power station is 591 MW.
See also
- Ostrovul Mare Bridge
- Iron Gate I Hydroelectric Power Station
- List of power stations in Romania
- Energy in Romania
References
External links
- Description (Romanian)
- The history of Iron Gate II (Romanian)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Iron Gate I and II Dams. |
- Articles containing Romanian-language text
- Articles containing Serbian-language text
- Articles with Romanian-language external links
- Commons category link is locally defined
- Dams in Romania
- Dams in Serbia
- Elektroprivreda Srbije
- Hydroelectric power stations in Romania
- Hydroelectric power stations in Serbia
- Romania–Serbia border crossings
- Dams completed in 1984