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Philippines
ITALY INDONESIA ICELAND Geothermal energy has been utilized on a commercial scale since 1930. Currently the resource is mainly used for space heating, with electricity generation being of fairly small significance (reflecting Iceland's wealth of hydroelectric resources). Two conventional geothermal power plants are in operation - Krafla, 30 MWe and Namafjall, 3 MWe. In addition, pioneering development work on the cogeneration of heat (district heating) and electricity has been undertaken. At present two cogeneration plants are in operation: Svartsengi (16.4 MWe), where both single flash and binary turbines are in use, and Nesjavellir (60 MWe), where it is expected that production of electricity will begin during 1998. Geothermal energy supplied nearly 7% of Iceland's electricity in 1996 and its utilization was as follows: electricity and CHP, 56%; direct use for space heating, 28%; industrial use, 6%; greenhouses, 4%; swimming pools, 3%; fish farming, 2% and snow-melting, 1%. About 85% of households are supplied with geothermal heating, mostly via large district heating schemes such as that in Reykjavik, which serves about 150,000 people. The islands of Indonesia possess enormous geothermal resources: geological surveys have identified 217 geothermal prospects, including a
Section II. Supplementary Reading total of 142 high-temperature reservoirs with an estimated resource potential of over 16,000 MWe. Of this potential, about 50% is in Java/Bali and 30% Sumatra. The first geothermal power plant to come into operation was a 2 MWe pilot plant' at Dieng (central Java), installed in 1981. A 30 MWe plant came on-line at Kamojang in west Java in 1983 and was augmented2by two units, each of 55 MWe, in 1988. In 1994 two 55 MWe units were installed at Salak and another of the same capacity at Dara-jat, both fields in Java. Total geothermal capacity at the end of 1996 stood at 308 MWe; the electricity generated in 1996 amounted to 2340 GWh, the fourth highest geothermal output in the world. Four more 55 MWe units came on-line at Salak in 1997, three of them in a privately-developed project involving the US company Unocal and PT Nusamba Geothermal. Other projects for new geothermal capacity are reported to be on hold3, owing to the financial crisis that hit Indonesia towards the end of 1997. 1 — опытная станция; 2 — увеличена; 3 — отложены Italy is Europe's leading producer of geothermal electricity, with a 1996 share of about 90%. The world's first geothermal power plant was commissioned in 1904 at Larderello in Tuscany. Subsequent developments at this and other sites in the same region have brought gross geothermal capacity to 512 MWe (at end-1996), representing 1% of Italy's total electricity generating capacity. Direct uses of geothermal heat had an aggregate installed capacity of just over 300 MWt at the end of 1996. In 1994, 57% of direct geothermal consumption related to baths and swimming pools, 19% to greenhouses, 16% to space heating, 7% to industrial process heat and 1 % to fish-farming. The low-medium temperature resources used for such purposes were all located north of Rome. JAPAN There is a long history of geothermal utilization, both direct and for power generation. The first commercial-scale geothermal power station came on-line at Matsukawa, in the north of the main island of D. Geothermal Energy in Different Countries of the World 129 Honshu, in 1966. Following the oil crisis in the early 1970's, geothermal development was accelerated. Generating capacity rose to 280 MWe in 1990 and has since nearly doubled, to 530 MWe at the end of 1996. The existing plants are all located in the Tohoku region of northern Honshu and on the southern island of Kyushu. Planned development of geothermal power envisages 600 MWe by 2000 and 2800 MWe by 2010. The Philippines archipelago is exceptionally well-endowed'with geothermal resources. The first electricity-generating capacity came into operation in 1979 and by the end of 1984 geothermal capacity had reached 894 MWe. Further units were installed from 1993 onwards, bringing aggregate capacity to 1448 MWe by the end of 1996. The greater part of the capacity has been built on the islands of Luzon and Leyte. The output of geothermal electricity in 1996 represented about 18% of total generation in the Philippines. More capacity is under construction or planned, with 460 MWe expected to come on-line in 2001 and a further 240 MWe scheduled to be completed by 2005. Geothermal heat is used directly in drying coconuts2 and other produce, and in fish-processing and salt production. 1 — хорошо обеспечены; 2 — плод кокосовой пальмы
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