Putrajaya Power Station

Coordinates: 2°58′02″N 101°40′54″E / 2.9673523°N 101.6817337°E / 2.9673523; 101.6817337
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Serdang Power Station)
Putrajaya Power Station
Map
Official nameSerdang Power Station
CountryMalaysia
LocationSerdang, Selangor
Coordinates2°58′02″N 101°40′54″E / 2.9673523°N 101.6817337°E / 2.9673523; 101.6817337
StatusOperational
Commission date1993
Owner(s)
Operator(s)Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB) (1993-present)
Thermal power station
Primary fuelGas
Power generation
Nameplate capacity
  • 252 MW
  • 625 MW

The Putrajaya Power Station (PJPS; Malay: Stesen Janaelektrik Putrajaya) is a gas turbine power station in Sepang District, Selangor, Malaysia. Previously known as Serdang Power Station, PJPS is one of seven thermal power stations owned by Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB).[1] It is under the management of TNB's Generation Division whose core business is generating electricity by operating and maintaining power plants.

History[edit]

Built as Serdang Power Station in 1993 with a generating capacity of 625 MW, PJPS was part of TNB's plan to increase power generation capacity to meet Malaysia's rising electricity demand in the early 1990s. The gas turbine plant in PJPS consists of two units of 110MW General Electric Frame 9E model and three units of Siemens 135MW V94.2 Ratio model. PJPS is a peaking power plant serving the Klang Valley load center. Its operating regime is of two shift cycles, operating between 12 and 16 hours daily mainly to meet the load demand during peak hours and stabilize the grid line voltage. The machine can be put on commercial loading within 30 minutes upon request from Malaysia's National Load Dispatch Center.

PJPS is located in Putrajaya, the administrative center of Malaysia. For this reason, the station has been identified as a lead station for restoration of Putrajaya Island in the event of interruption of electricity. Its name was changed to Putrajaya Power Station on 15 February 2006.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "TNB Generation Division". Retrieved 2009-02-13. [dead link]