Joint venture power station temporarily withdrawn
NEWS RELEASE
2 December 2013
Joint venture power station temporarily withdrawn for turbine maintenance
Nga Awa Purua Joint Venture has temporarily withdrawn its geothermal power station from the market to carry out repairs on the steam turbine, and is scheduled to have the station near Taupo operating again within 1-2 weeks.
Joint Venture Chair, William Meek, said that during a planned outage for routine maintenance, inspections found that the turbine blades were being affected by geothermal fluids used to power the plant. The turbine was modified to allow ongoing operation, reducing operating capacity to about 95%.
“This shut means we can open up the turbine so that we can properly assess the issue to increase reliability of the plant through until permanent repairs can be made in about 15-18 months.”
He said the maintenance outage would not have a material financial impact, with revenue losses mitigated by current wholesale market conditions. The current estimated repair and turbine blade replacement cost to the joint venture is expected to be about $15 million in FY2015.
About Nga Awa Purua:
• Nga Awa Purua station
commissioned March 2010, with rating of 138MW (above
original design by 8MW)
• Jointly owned: Mighty
River Power 65% / Tauhara North No.2 Trust 35%
•
Plant availability since commissioning 96%, well above
international
benchmarks.
ENDS
Advertising Standards Authority: ASA Annual Report 2025 - Platform-Neutral Regulation Keeps Pace With Digital Advertising
Science Media Centre: Lead Pipes Banned For New Plumbing – Expert Reaction
New Zealand Young Physicists Trust: Auckland To Host The ‘World Cup Of Physics’ In 2027; Search Begins For Student-Designed Tournament Logo
Oxfam Aotearoa: Top CEO Pay Increased 20 Times Faster Than Workers’ Pay In 2025
Bill Bennett: TUANZ Report - Networks Built, Value Missing
Workers First Union: May Day - Union Warns Against Fuel Crisis Opportunism By Employers

