Shisanling Pumped Storage Power Station


The Shisanling Pumped Storage Power Station is a pumped-storage power station in Changping District of Beijing, China, near the Thirteen Tombs of the Ming Dynasty from where it got its name Shisanling, which means "thirteen tombs". The power station contains four reversible turbines for an installed capacity of 800 MW.

Background

Planning and designs for the power station commenced in 1974 and in 1988, the National Electric Power Ministry and People's Government of Beijing decided to go forth with the project. Construction was initiated that year and by 1995, the first unit was in operation.

Operation

Shisanling Dam

The Shisanling Dam creates the power station's lower reservoir and was an already existing dam. The earth-fill embankment dam is high and long. The dam creates a reservoir that can store of water and contains a controlled chute spillway.

Upper reservoir

From the lower reservoir, water is pumped up into the upper reservoir which has a normal storage capacity of. The upper reservoir is artificial was built into the Mang mountain with the assistance of a high and long concrete-face rock-fill dam. When power is being generated, the water leaves the reservoir and falls through two penstocks down towards the power station which is underground and just above the lower reservoir. Before reaching the reversible turbines, the water branches off into four branch pipes.

Power station

The four branch pipes feed water into the four turbines and after it generates power it is returned to the lower reservoir to repeat cycle when operating. Each reversible turbine has a 200 MW installed capacity. The turbines and generators are stored in an underground power house measuring long, wide and high..