PJSC Territorial Generating Company No. 14 ( PJSC TGK-14 ) is a Russian energy company created as a result of the reform of RAO UES of Russia [2] . Work profile is a heat-generating company, a leading producer and supplier of electric and thermal energy in the Trans-Baikal Territory and the Republic of Buryatia .
| Territorial Generating Company No. 14 | |
|---|---|
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| Type of | Public company |
| Exchange listing | |
| Base | 2004 year |
| Former names | RAO "UES of Russia" |
| Location | |
| Key figures | Kulakov, Alexander Sergeevich |
| Industry | power industry ( ISIC :3510 )power engineering ( ISIC : 3530 ) |
| Products | Thermal energy, electricity |
| Turnover | ▲ 5,519.7 million rubles (2008 year) [1] |
| Net profit | ▼ loss −394.5 million rubles. (2008) |
| Number of employees | 5,630 |
| Affiliated companies | JSC "Special automotive industry" LLC “Unified Information and Settlement Center” |
| Auditor | Bdo |
| Website | www.tgk-14.com |
Full name - Public Joint-Stock Company “Territorial Generating Company No. 14” . It was registered on December 7, 2004 in the city of Chita [3] .
Content
- 1 History
- 2 Owners and management
- 3 Composition of the company
- 4 Activities
- 5 See also
- 6 notes
- 7 References
History
In February 1903, the Chita city government invited those wishing to participate in a contract for electric lighting of the streets and houses of Chita.
On July 17, 1906, at a meeting of the City Duma, the inspector of a vocational school, in his speech, proposed giving the project of electric lighting to N.P. Polyakov.
A partnership was created for the electric lighting station Nikolay Polyakov & K. The wooden station building was originally built in the courtyard of the Vocational School. In 1908, designed by architect F.E. Ponomarev built a new stone two-story storey building of the station on the former Nikolaevskaya street (now Profsoyuznaya street, 13). The station gave the first current on October 16 (29), 1906. Its initial capacity was 155 kW. in 1913 - 485 kW. and by 1917, power had increased to 830 kW.
In February 1923, the station was nationalized and transferred to the Chita City Committee.
In 1926 Gorkomuntrest Vodosvet was organized, which is responsible for the station. In 1927, at the power plant, its own store selling electrical products was opened. After the accident in 1928 and the subsequent construction of the Chernivsk Power Station, Polyakova Station was closed.
Chita CHPP-2 (1936). The station was put into operation in October 1936. She appeared as a division of skin coat factory. With two steam boilers and one 2.5 MW turbine, one of the largest enterprises in the field of heat energy production began. The third boiler appeared at the CHP during the Great Patriotic War in 1944.
In 1958, there were more than 900 power plants in the Chita Region, of which 860 had a total capacity of only 36 thousand kilowatts, and all of them hardly provided 80% of the electricity demand. Basically, the energy consumption plan provided for the construction of the Chita State District Power Plant with a capacity of 300 thousand kilowatts and the Kharanorsk State District Power Plant - 500 thousand kilowatts.
Timlyuyskaya TPP (1953). September 10, 1953 - the first boiler and turbogenerator of the CHP of the Timlyui CHP with a capacity of 18.0 MW were launched, then the second and third boilers and turbogenerators were commissioned before 1954, and in 1955 the fourth boiler.
The development of the commissioned capacities was associated with certain difficulties. Installed imported Swiss equipment, there was an acute shortage of qualified workers, so the leadership of the CHP decided to train personnel from the local population. In 1956, boiler units 5 and 6, turbines 5, 6 were commissioned, and in 1958, turbine number 6.
In December 1960, the last boiler unit No. 7 was introduced. The construction of the CHP was completed.
In 1958, the Buryatenergo regional energy department was created. On April 1, 1961, the CHP was transferred to the Buryatenergo REU. In 1964, the transmission line - 220 was introduced. At the TPP, measures are being developed to transfer equipment to the heating mode. The turbine workshop was reconstructed.
In 1964, 8.1 km of the city’s heating networks were connected to Chita CHPP-2. In 1976, the GRES heating main was established - the city. Chita heating networks transferred to the balance of CHP-2. In 1987 and 1988, two hot water boilers with a capacity of 50 Gcal / h each were put into operation.
On December 30, 1966, hot water was supplied to the village and since then Kamenets have been using centralized heat supply.
In 1970, the Baikal Electric Networks enterprise, which is part of Buryatenergo JSC, was created on the basis of the Timlyuisk TPP. The CHP entered BES as a production unit, a lot of work has been done to develop the electric grid economy, power lines have been built, and a number of powerful substations of different voltages.
Sherlovogorsk Thermal Power Plant (1956). It was put into operation on October 26, 1956. The installed capacity of the station is 12 MW. Sherlovogorsk CHP was designed by the Moscow Institute of Promenergo. The construction was carried out in two phases. On October 23, 1956, the boiler was preliminarily kindled, and on October 29 of the same year, the first boiler of the Czechoslovak company ČKD-Dutla and the first turbine of the Czechoslovak company Škoda with a capacity of 6,000 kilowatts, but with industrial selection, were put into commercial operation. In the same month, heat entered the residential village.
The construction of the second stage of the Sherlovogorsk CHPP consists of a boiler of the Barnaul plant and a turbine of the Bryansk plant with a capacity of 12,000 kilowatts. Already in 1962, the Sherlovogorkaya CHPP and the Holbon Central Electric Power Plant joined in parallel work on the power transmission line 110 - one of the first experiments in creating the Trans-Baikal power system. In 2006, the Sherlovogorsk Thermal Power Plant turned 50 years old.
Chita CHPP-1 (1958). The construction of the station (then still a state district power station) began on the western shore of Lake Kenon in 1958. From the "first peg" to the launch of the station, only seven years have passed.
In the design of the station it was built a number of unusual technical solutions. Due to the lack of experience in the construction of large facilities in permafrost, it was decided: the main facilities of the station should be located on an artificially created foundation, for which part of the water area of Lake Kenon was washed out by sand. The volume of work is one million cubic meters. The main contractor for the construction was the Sibenergostroy trust.
The power plant gave the first current on September 30, 1965. The first director of the flagship Trans-Baikal energy was Alexei Semenovich Titov. The start of the Chita TPP gave a powerful impetus to the development of industry and transport in our field. Power consumption has begun to grow rapidly. The electrification of the railway and agriculture began.
In 1978, the power capacity of the state district power station reached its design value of 520 MW.
In 1982, the Chita TPP was renamed the Chita TPP-1.
On September 30, 2005, Chita CHPP-1 celebrated its 40th anniversary.
Priargun TPP (1961). The station began to give electricity October 1, 1961. Power station 24 MW. The village of power engineers under construction Priargunsk and Prargunskaya CHPP did not have a name for five whole years. Only in 1958, the village of Stroyka was given the name Tsurukhaytuy. In 1952, the first street was laid with houses, a shop, a kindergarten, a hospital. Only in 1962, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR, the workers' settlement Tsurukhaytuy was renamed the village of Priargunsk.
The station also changed its name three times: in the design process, it was called Nerchinskaya CHPP, then Novotsurukhukhtuiskaya, after the commissioning it became Priargunskaya. A trial launch of the Priargunskaya CHPP took place on September 21, 1961 as part of the first boiler and the second turbine unit. The date of acceptance of the station into operation is considered October 1, 1961.
With the launch of the CHP, the infrastructure of the entire region began to actively develop. A cheese factory, a bakery, a road construction base, and other large industrial and processing enterprises were created. There was an opportunity for the development of social projects, schools, kindergartens, and social institutions were opened.
Now the main consumer of the station’s heat is the village of Priargunsk. Centralized heat supply from the CHP covers 80% of the entire housing stock of the village. In October 2006, the Priargun TPP turned 45 years old.
Ulan-Ude TPP-2 (1982). The need for the construction of a CHPP-2 was due to an ever-increasing shortage of thermal power of centralized sources in the city of Ulan-Ude in the 70s of the 20th century.
1982 - energy builders began preparatory work at the industrial site of TPP-2 in the city of Ulan-Ude. The estimated cost of the launch complex amounted to 54 million rubles in current prices.
In February 1983, the draft of the first stage of the U-U TPP-2 was approved by order No. 132 ps of the USSR Ministry of Energy and Energy as a part of 2 heating power units of 200 MW and 4 boilers E-160-24 of a peak hot-water boiler.
In 1991, the first steam boiler with a capacity of 160 t / h was commissioned at the peak boiler plant at CHPP-2. At the end of 1998, there were three boiler units in operation.
In January 1992, the 2nd Boiler E-160 was launched as part of the second launch complex.
1998 - Launch of the 3rd boiler E-160 as part of the third launch complex.
Ulan-Ude TPP-2 provides heat to residents of the Oktyabrsky District, industrial enterprises of various forms of ownership, hospitals and schools, which makes up about 30% of the total district heating of the city of Ulan-Ude.
In 2000, the boiler of station No. 7 was transferred to a furnace with a low-temperature fluidized bed. The name of the method of burning fuel, which is obscure for most people, has a number of advantages. Firstly, new boilers provide five gigacalories of heat more than before. Additional gigacalories of reconstructed boilers are able to heat an entire microdistrict. Secondly, air emissions have become less. Thirdly, new boilers require much less effort, money and time for repair, they are easier to manage.
Public Joint-Stock Company “Territorial Generating Company No. 14” is a part of RAO UES of Russia holding and was established on December 7, 2004. February 1, 2005 the power company started operations.
The company was one of the first TGKs in Russia to begin its operations. In 2006, the transformation of the Company into a full-fledged generating company was completed.
At the end of June 2008, RAO UES sold the state stake in TGK-14 (19.25% of the shares in the increased authorized capital of TGK-14) to Energopromsbyt (a joint venture of Russian Railways (51%) and ESN group of entrepreneur Grigory Berezkin (49 %)) for 1.93 billion rubles. ($ 464 per 1 kW) [4] . Later, as a result of an additional issue of TGK-14 shares, Energopromsbyt increased its stake to 49.25%, becoming the largest shareholder in the energy company [5] . In May 2009, MMC Norilsk Nickel sold its stake (27.7%) to Energopromsbyt LLC [6] .
In May 2012, the UST group completely sold its stake in TGK-14 to its main shareholder, Russian Railways OJSC [7] .
Owners and management
The largest shareholders of PJSC TGK-14 as of June 30, 2016 were: LLC Energopromsbyt (39.81%), TransFinGroup Management Company (18.73%), TransFico (24.89%) [8] .
The share capital of TGK-14 as of September 30, 2008 amounted to 1,357,945,609 rubles. 11 kopecks. and is divided into 1,357,945,609,114 ordinary shares with a par value of 0.001 rubles.
Capitalization on the MICEX in mid-June 2008 - 5.6 billion rubles. [9]
General Director - Victor Cheslavovich Butcher.
The company
TGC-14 PJSC includes six branches:
- Chita Generation branch;
- Chita Energy Complex branch;
- Chita Teploenergosbyt branch;
- branch "Generation of Buryatia";
- branch "Ulan-Ude Energy Complex";
- branch "Teploenergosbyt of Buryatia".
Activities
The company owns [10] 8 thermal power plants , of which:
in the Transbaikal Territory:
- Pervomayskaya CHPP [11] ;
- Priargun TPP ;
- Chita CHPP-1 ;
- Chita CHPP-2 ;
- Sherlovogorsk CHP ;
in the Republic of Buryatia:
- Timlyuyskaya CHPP ;
- Ulan-Ude TPP-1 ;
- Ulan-Ude TPP-2 .
The total installed capacity of TGK-14 OJSC is 667.77 MW for electric and 2707.6 Gcal / h for thermal energy. [9]
The company's revenue in 2007 amounted to 4.9 billion rubles., Net profit - 169 million rubles. [9]
In 2007, 2.37 billion kWh of electricity was generated, and 5.93 million Gcal of heat energy.
TGK-14 investment program until 2011 is 7.2 billion rubles.
See also
- List of thermal power plants in Russia
Notes
- ↑ 400 largest companies in Siberia // Expert-Siberia. Number 40 - 41. October 26 - November 8, 2009
- ↑ Section About the company on the official website.
- ↑ Power industry reform Archived March 22, 2012. // Website of RAO UES
- ↑ Railways connected to TGK-14 // Vladimir Kommersant.
- ↑ Anna Peretolchina. We'll have to wait // Vedomosti. November 27, 2008, No. 225 (2247)
- ↑ Nornickel loses energy // Ekaterina Kommersant-Grishkovets.
- ↑ Ksenia Dokukina. Berezkin sold RZD its stake in TGK-14 . // vedomosti.ru. Date of treatment May 30, 2012. Archived June 27, 2012.
- ↑ Structure of the share capital of TGK-14 OJSC as of December 31, 2010
- ↑ 1 2 3 Elena Mazneva. Russian Railways bought the station // Vedomosti, No. 113 (2135), June 23, 2008
- ↑ Section Composition of the company on the official website
- ↑ TGK-14 internal news
