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Shand Power Station

Coordinates: 49°5′18″N 102°51′50″W / 49.08833°N 102.86389°W / 49.08833; -102.86389
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Shand Power Station
Map
CountryCanada
LocationEstevan No. 5, near Estevan, Saskatchewan
Coordinates49°5′18″N 102°51′50″W / 49.08833°N 102.86389°W / 49.08833; -102.86389
StatusOperational
Commission date1992
OwnerSaskPower
Thermal power station
Primary fuelCoal
Power generation
Nameplate capacity279 MW
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Shand Power Station is a coal fired station owned by SaskPower in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, near the city of Estevan.

Description

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The Shand Power Station consists of:[1]

  • one 279 net MW unit (commissioned in 1992)
  • advanced environmental controls through a LIFAC (Limestone Injection into the Furnace and reActivation of Calcium) system

The boilers are supplied by Babcock & Wilcox and the turbines/generator are supplied by Hitachi.[2] The site is sized for a potential second unit in the future. A single 148 m (486 ft) smokestack is located at the plant, the tallest freestanding structure in Saskatchewan.

The unit at Shand would have to be retired by 2030 under federal regulations unless carbon capture and storage was installed.[3]

Shand Greenhouses

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Shand Greenhouse was built in 1991 near the power station and is part of an initiative to offset the environmental impact of burning coal. The greenhouse grow and distribute seedlings free of charge to schools, communities and individuals for conservation and wildlife habitat projects.[4] The species of trees that are grown and given to the communities include: buffaloberry, bur oak, choke cherry, Colorado blue spruce, eastern red cedar, green ash, jack pine, lodgepole pine, Manitoba maple, pin cherry, plains cottonwood, red alder, red-osier dogwood, Saskatoon berry, Scots pine, sea-buckthorn, shrub willow, Siberian crab, Siberian larch, trembling aspen or white poplar, villosa lilac, western sandcherry, white birch or paper birch, willow, and Woods' rose.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Plant Description Archived 2009-10-15 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Coal Fired Power Plants in Canada - Power Plants Around the World Archived 2012-12-05 at archive.today
  3. ^ "No more retrofits for carbon capture and storage at Boundary Dam: SaskPower". The Province. 9 July 2018. Retrieved 3 August 2024.
  4. ^ "Our greenhouse". Archived from the original on 29 June 2009. Retrieved 17 January 2010.
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