Jebel Ali Power and Desalination Plant

Coordinates: 25°3′35″N 55°7′2″E / 25.05972°N 55.11722°E / 25.05972; 55.11722
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Jebel Ali Power and Desalination Plant
Some chimneys of the power plant
Map
Official nameArabic: محطة جبل على‎
CountryUnited Arab Emirates
LocationJebel Ali, Emirate of Dubai
Coordinates25°3′35″N 55°7′2″E / 25.05972°N 55.11722°E / 25.05972; 55.11722
StatusOperational
Commission date1976-2019[1]
Owner(s)
Operator(s)Dubai Electricity and Water Authority
Thermal power station
Primary fuelNatural gas, associated petroleum gas
IWPP?Yes
Power generation
Nameplate capacity
  • 8,694.1 MW

The Jebel Ali Power and Desalination Plant (Arabic: محطة جبل على‎) is a gas- and oil-powered CCGT plant combined with a desalination plant southwest of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

The power plant complex, consisting of nine individual plants, extends over a length of more than three kilometers along the coast of the Persian Gulf between the port of Jebel Ali and the Jumeirah district. On the water side, the power plant is located between the artificial islands of Palm Jumeirah and Palm Jebel Ali, a good 40 km southwest of Dubai.

The facility, which is operated by Dubai's Electricity and Water Authority, covers most of Dubai's energy and water consumption. With an installed capacity of 8.6 gigawatts, it is the world's largest gas-fired power plant. Also the world's largest seawater desalination plant, it can desalinate 2.135 million m³ of seawater per day (as of 2015), which corresponds to 470 million imperial gallons per day (MIGD).[2]

The primary fuel used is natural gas or associated gas from oil production; diesel and heating oil are used as back-up. Since Dubai's own oil and gas production is insufficient, fuel is imported via pipelines from neighboring emirates (especially Abu Dhabi and Sharjah) and other countries bordering the Persian Gulf (especially Iran and Qatar).[3]

With one exception, the seawater desalination plants work according to the multi-stage flash distillation process, i.e. they use the waste heat from the power plant. Only one system uses the reverse osmosis process.

See also

References

Ibn Battuta mall