French nuclear energy giant AREVA to build 6 biomass power plants in Thailand and Brazil
France-based multinational industrial conglomerate AREVA announces [*French] that it has been awarded contracts to build six biomass power stations - four in Brazil and two in Thailand - worth more than €70 (US$92) million.
AREVA is the world's leading nuclear power company offering CO2-free energy and being the only enterprise with a presence in each industrial activity linked to nuclear energy: from mining to enrichment and engineering nuclear reactors to stabilization and dismantling. It has recently begun to diversify into renewables.
The contracts for the biomass cogeneration plants were signed with German company CCC Machinery and with the Bua Sommai Electricity Generating Company in Thailand.
The power plants have a capacity of between 10 and 12MW each and will be fuelled by wood waste and agro-forestry residues in the case of the Brazilian plants, and by rice hulls, an abundant biomass resource in Thailand (see our earlier post on highly dedicated and optimized fluidized bed combustors for rice hulls, and on the energy potential of this resource).
The bioenergy plants will deliver electricity at competitive prices in the rural regions where they are to be established. The operators will receive carbon credits valid and tradeable under the Kyoto Protocol.
The Brazilian contract represents the largest order of AREVA's activities in the sector of renewable energy.
These activities, mainly concentrated around wind, biomass and hydrogen, were grouped into one business unit in november 2006. The group sees them as a natural complement to its nuclear activities, which it is promoting under the motto of delivering 'CO2-free' electricity [entry ends here].
bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: wood :: rice hulls :: cogeneration :: biomass :: Brazil :: Thailand ::
AREVA is the world's leading nuclear power company offering CO2-free energy and being the only enterprise with a presence in each industrial activity linked to nuclear energy: from mining to enrichment and engineering nuclear reactors to stabilization and dismantling. It has recently begun to diversify into renewables.
The contracts for the biomass cogeneration plants were signed with German company CCC Machinery and with the Bua Sommai Electricity Generating Company in Thailand.
The power plants have a capacity of between 10 and 12MW each and will be fuelled by wood waste and agro-forestry residues in the case of the Brazilian plants, and by rice hulls, an abundant biomass resource in Thailand (see our earlier post on highly dedicated and optimized fluidized bed combustors for rice hulls, and on the energy potential of this resource).
The bioenergy plants will deliver electricity at competitive prices in the rural regions where they are to be established. The operators will receive carbon credits valid and tradeable under the Kyoto Protocol.
The Brazilian contract represents the largest order of AREVA's activities in the sector of renewable energy.
These activities, mainly concentrated around wind, biomass and hydrogen, were grouped into one business unit in november 2006. The group sees them as a natural complement to its nuclear activities, which it is promoting under the motto of delivering 'CO2-free' electricity [entry ends here].
bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: wood :: rice hulls :: cogeneration :: biomass :: Brazil :: Thailand ::
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