From Wikipedia - Reading time: 6 min| Ngatamariki Power Station | |
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| Country | New Zealand |
| Location | 17 km (11 mi) northeast of Taupō, Waikato |
| Coordinates | 38°32′50″S 176°11′45″E / 38.54722°S 176.19583°E |
| Status | Operational |
| Construction began | July 2011 |
| Commission date | September 2013 |
| Construction cost | NZ$475 million [1] |
| Owner(s) | Mercury Energy |
| Geothermal power station | |
| Wells | 7 |
| Power generation | |
| Nameplate capacity | 82 MW 110 MW (Planned) |
| Annual net output | 700 GWh |
Ngatamariki is a geothermal power station commissioned in 2013 and operated by Mercury Energy. It is located approximately 17 km north east of Taupō and was constructed well under the budget of $475 million.[1][2][3]
The field was initially explored by the Crown in 1985-86, with the wells NM1, NM2, NM3, and NM4 drilled to 1300m, 2403m, 2194m, and 2749m respectively.[4] NM4 was the first well in New Zealand to encounter a pluton, at a depth of almost 2400m. Mighty River Power undertook further drilling in 2008-09, with wells NM5, NM6, and NM7 drilled to depths of 2997m, 3398m, 2963m respectively.[5] Resource consents for further development were granted in May 2010.[6]
Work at the geothermal field site on the first stage of the plant (82 MW) commenced in July 2011[7] and the plant became operational in September, 2013, one month later than scheduled.[2][8] The power station is a binary plant, supplied under an EPC contract by Ormat.[9] A 220,000-volt power line connects Ngatamariki to Mercury's Nga Awa Purua Power Station, where electricity from both stations is injected into Transpower's national grid.
The Ngatamariki Geothermal site consists of 7 geothermal wells (3 production and 4 re-injection). In addition to the main geothermal wells, there are 21 sentinel and monitoring wells, to depths of 1,500m.[1]
