Farakka power station

Farakka power station is a 1,600 megawatt (MW) coal-fired power station in West Bengal, India which is owned and operated by the National Thermal Power Corporation.

According to the India Central Electricity Authority, a sixth unit of the plant (500 MW) - Farakka III power station - was commissioned on March 23, 2011.
 * Unit 1 - 200 MW - 1986
 * Unit 2 - 200 MW - 1986
 * Unit 3 - 200 MW - 1987
 * Unit 4 - 500 MW - 1992
 * Unit 5 - 500 MW - 1994
 * Unit 6 - 500 MW - 2011 (Farakka III power station)

Coal supply problems
A March 2012 article in the Indian Express described coal shortages at the Farakka plant and others across India:
 * Two projects that were perennially short on coal through whole of last year were NTPC Ltd’s 2,340 MW Kahalgaon station in Bihar and the 2,100 MW Farakka station in West Bengal. The irony is that while Kahalgaon is located right on the pithead (at the coal mine itself, so that there is no need to transfer the coal to the plant), Farakka is not too far. And both are among stations that form the backbone of the eastern region’s generation sector. While the Farakka station has infrastucture in place to operate at over 90 per cent plant load factor, the utility is mostly operating at only 70 per cent because of the short supply of coal. The shortfall in domestic supplies is being made up by imports, which, in turn, jacks up tariffs. The problem here is that most coal reserves in the east are located in Maoist-infested areas. A senior government official says that the entire coal mining value chain in the eastern region is ridden with trade unionism and gangs who pilfer coal, especially from easy targets that include public sector firms or smaller private power producers. The head of a mid-sized state-owned generation firm has repeatedly been complaining about local Coal India employees colluding with middlemen to siphon off his fuel. “The coal mafia is strong and there is absolutely no guarantee that coal will reach the designated consumer, despite assurances from Kolkata (where Coal India is headquartered) or New Delhi,” the official says. With the coal crisis showing little sign of a resolution, despite the Prime Minister’s intervention, utilities across the country have been instructed to make design changes in all future coal-fired projects to enable higher imported coal blending. However, running power plants on imported coal involves an entirely different challenge.

Location
The plant is located at Murshidabad in West Bengal.

Project Details for 500 MW Expansion
Sponsor: Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC) Location: Murshidabad, West Bengal, India Coordinates: 24.772, 87.894 Status: Operating 2011 Nameplate capacity: 500 MW Type: Projected in service: Coal Type: Coal Source: Estimated annual CO2: Source of financing:

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