Kawasaki Steam Turbine Generator Shipped to Korea’s POSCO
Sep. 07, 2010
Tokyo, September 7, 2010 — Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd. announced today that it has shipped a steam turbine generator with a rated output of 29.7 MW from its Kobe Works to the POSCO*1Gwangyang Steel Works in Korea.
Designed to effectively reuse energy, the steam turbine generator will be installed in a coke dry quencher (CDQ*2) at POSCO’s Gwangyang Steel Works. The CDQ will quench red-hot coke that has been dried by distillation in a coke oven with inert gas and then recover sensible heat using a boiler to produce steam for power generation. The Gwangyang Steel Works, which currently uses four CDQs, decided to install an additional CDQ as part of its current plan to expand its coke oven facility.
Kawasaki launched its first industrial steam turbine in 1956. Since then it has racked up a long list of achievements encompassing the delivery of about 340 steam turbine units, including the sale of 10 steam turbines to POSCO. This latest shipment to POSCO is a testament to the superior performance and lifecycle cost of Kawasaki steam turbines as well as its outstanding reliability and proven track record.
Kawasaki continues to leverage its world of experience in the area of power generating steam turbines with an eye to expanding sales and meeting today’s growing need for greater energy efficiency.
*1. Founded in 1968 under the name of Pohang Iron and Steel Co., Ltd., the company was renamed POSCO in 2002 following privatization in 2000.
*2. A CDQ quenches red-hot coke (dried by distillation in a coke oven) with inert gases circulating in a quenching chamber. The CDQ quenching process occurs in a completely air-tight environment. The thermal energy, which would otherwise dissipate into the ambient environment as vapor with conventional wet quenching methods, can be recovered by the CDQ and used to generate electric power.