Taipower Relies on CTCI for Northern Taiwan Power Solution

Linkou Ultra-Supercritical 2,400MW Coal-Fired Power Plant Project

  • Market: Power
  • Owner:Taiwan Power Company (Taipower)
  • Licensor:MC / Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems (MHPS)
  • CODs:July 2016 (Unit 1); April 2017(Unit 2); July 2019 (Unit 3)
  • Location:Linkou, Taiwan
  • Scope of Work:E + P + C + K
  • Capacity:2,400MW
As it approached its 40th year of operation, Taipower’s Linkou 600MW Power Plant needed to be decommissioned or upgraded. Faced with heavy strain on the island’s power supply, particularly with the decommissioning of Taiwan’s Number 1 Nuclear Power Plant at Jinshan due in 2018, owner Taiwan Power Company (Taipower) opted to instigate a massive renewal project. When the renewal is complete, Linkou will be Taipower’s first coal-fired ultra supercritical-pressure (USC) power plant, and will provide the north of Taiwan with a significant source of electricity. 

A consortium of CTCI and Mitsubishi Corporation (MC) received the order for three coal-fired USC power generation units of 800MW in 2011, representing what was at the time the largest turnkey order in CTCI’s history. The completion of the 800MW Unit 1 of the plant demonstrates CTCI’s ability to work as an equal partner with international technology licensors on projects of significant scale, and paves the way for CTCI to undertake further power market projects on the international market.

Why CTCI?

A Strong, Technical Partnership

CTCI had forged a strong relationship with Taipower as a result of a track record of successfully completed power projects in Taiwan, including the world’s fourth-largest gas turbine combined cycle power plant at Dah-Tarn. That project also established a bond of trust between CTCI and MC/MHPS, which supplied the turbines for the 4,384MW plant. These factors combined with a highly detailed and cost-competitive bid gave Taipower the confidence to entrust the CTCI-MC/MHPS consortium with the project.

Reliable Realized

Multi-Dimensional Thinking

Due to concern over cost and national power distribution, Taipower needed to operate the soon-to-be decommissioned Linkou plant for as long as possible before handing over the entire site to CTCI. That meant that until the old plant could be demolished, CTCI’s construction team was initially confined to operating in an area of just 36,442m², (compared with a total work site area of 173,994m² at the end of the project). Our project managers had to meticulously plan the safe and efficient use of this limited space. We used 3D SmartPlant Review models show Taipower exactly how the project would develop over time, including how the seawater tunnels running beneath the site could be excavated by managing the work sequence without causing disruption to workflow. At the time of writing, we are working closely with Taipower, and have so far managed to complete milestones on schedule. The tight timelines also demanded construction teams regularly worked through the night to keep to schedule. 

Conventional coal-fired power plants operate at about 32% efficiency. Ultra-supercritical (USC) plants operate at temperatures and pressures above those at which the liquid and gas phases of water coexist in equilibrium, resulting in efficiencies above 45%. USC power plants require less coal per megawatt-hour, leading to lower emissions (including carbon dioxide and mercury), higher efficiency and lower fuel costs per megawatt. 

Technical Matters

Safer, Faster Heavy Lifting

CTCI implemented a special process for erecting and installing the 80m No.1 boiler island. In order to keep the use of space and time to a minimum, as well as for safety reasons, the majority of assembly work was conducted on the ground. The team used a specially designed self-balancing hydraulic system comprised of 16 bar jacks with a combined maximum load of 4,000 tons, working in tandem with four strand jacks, to elevate the 1,912-ton integrated roof structure. The structure was then raised and lowered to match the setting elevations of various pressure parts, allowing the installation and fixing of suspension beams to hang the boiler components, as well as piping, and reinforcing steel beams to house the boiler. The entire operation and eventual hanging of the boiler equipment, which weighed about 8,000 tons, was safely completed and ready for hydro-testing in just 11 months.


Smarter Engineering

Packaging an Intelligent Instrumentation Solution

CTCI was responsible for the plant’s Instrument Control Design (ICD), including the Distributed Control & Data Acquisition System (DCDAS) logic and Material Take Off (MTO), and integrating these with the various vendors’ equipment packages in the Balance of Plant and Air Quality Control System (AQCS) areas. This proved to be a serious challenge given the number and variety of systems and vendors: 
CTCI worked with all the vendors and construction sub-contractors through the various phases of clarifying, testing, adjusting, troubleshooting and commissioning the ICD, resulting in the seamless integration and successful completion of the plant’s instrument work.

“The CTCI Linkou project team has done everything that has been asked of them so far. Completing the project on time is their priority, and consequently their team has also taken on and completed additional work outside the scope of the contract. Unit one has achieved full functionality without a hitch.”

Tseng Hsin-pin
Taipower Project Manager 

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