The German municipally-owned utility companies, Hamburger Energiewerke and Stromnetz Hamburg, are considering developing a combined heat and power (CHP) generation plant at the Hafen Energy Park park, in Dradenau, south of Hamburg, Germany.

Germany targets to reduce by 65% its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 2035 compared to 1990 and reach zero carbon emissions by 2045.
The German government aims to end coal-fired power generation by 2036 latest and replace it with more sustainable energy sources.
The Dradenau CHP power plant should replace the Wedel power station, which has a 289.7 megawatt (MW) coal-fired power generation capacity.
Hamburger Energiewerk is planning to develop the Dradenau CHP power plant with:
– 180 MW gas-fired power generation
– 260 MW district heating capacity
The feedstock to power the heat plant should come from:
– Thermal waste recovery
– Industrial waste heat
– Waste heat from sewage treatment plant processes
The FEED started in 2021, the engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) should follow before early-2022, and operations are expected for late-2024.
— September 2021 —
Hamburger Energiewerk awarded the EPC to a joint venture between ENKA and ARGE Uniper.
ENKA should lead most of the development and include:
– Two Siemens SGT800 gas turbines
– One steam turbine
– Two heat recovery steam generator (HRSG)
– One gas-fired steam generator
— June 2022 —
Hamburger Energiewerk and Stromnetz Hamburg received the green light from the German authorities and took the final investment decision for $410 million.

If you are interested by project information, www.ProjectSmartExplorer.com is made for you.
Project Smart Explorer covers all the project of Oil & Gas, Petrochemical and Energy Transition around the planet to help you capture more business.
Ask your demo at this link
