Power plant location | Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia |
Power plant type | Waste-to-energy plant |
Commissioned in | 1987 |
Fuel | Household waste, similar commercial waste, bulky waste |
Electrical output (net) | 38 MW |
Flue gas cleaning | Electrostatic filter, flue gas desulphurisation, activated carbon absorber, flue gas denitrification system |
Facts and figures
Top in Germany
The Essen-Karnap waste incineration plant is an integral part of the North Rhine-Westphalian waste management plan. The waste generated by the cities of Essen and Gelsenkirchen alone takes up over 50% of the available incineration capacity at the plant. The energy generated during the thermal processing of the waste is used for district heating and electricity generation, thus saving on resources. The Essen-Karnap incineration plant is among the top energy converters of all waste incineration plants in Germany.
A tradition of almost 80 years
Karnap has been a power plant site for almost 80 years. Waste incineration started in the early 1960s, after the former hard-coal-fired power plant had been converted. The old plant was decommissioned in 1987 and replaced with a modern waste-to-energy plant. Today, the three boilers from the first construction stage in 1987 and the fourth boiler from the second construction stage (commissioned in 1993) can incinerate in excess of 700,000 tonnes of non-recyclable waste per year. This makes the waste-to-energy plant in Essen one of the largest of its type in Germany.
Long-term environmental protection is guaranteed
In line with new environmental regulations, new cleaning stages were added to the flue gas scrubbing equipment in 1995 and to the waste water treatment system in 1998. This ensures comprehensive protection of the environment. The calorific value generated during the incineration of non-recyclable waste in the plant amounts to 109 MJ/s for the district heating grid in the Ruhr area and up to 48 MW of electricity. Most of the residues from the incineration process are recycled.