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The Rajiv Gandhi Combined Cycle Power Plant or Kayamkulam Thermal Power Plant (also known as Rajiv Gandhi CCPP) is a combined cycle power plant located at shore of Kayamkulam Lake in Choolatheruvu, Muthukulam in Alappuzha district, Kerala, India. The power plant is owned by NTPC Limited. The power plant is fueled by imported and indigenous ...
[1] [2] The plant supplies power to the Kerala State Electricity Board, utilizing the 22 0kV GIS substation. [3] The implementation of the project costs ₹ 465 crore (US$54 million). About 2.16 lakh solar panels will be installed on floaters. There was a delay in completing the project, which was initially planned to be operational in 2021.
NTPC Limited, formerly known as National Thermal Power Corporation, ... Kerala: 359.58 2x115.2 + 1x129.177 All unit Running 7 Faridabad: Haryana: 431.59 2×143, 1×144
Public sector undertaking National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) and several other state level power generating companies are engaged in operating coal-based thermal power plants. Apart from NTPC and other state level operators, some private companies also operate the power plants. [9] One coal plant was given environmental clearance in 2021 ...
Haripad is a town and municipality in Alappuzha District of Kerala State in India. Its coordinates are Latitude: 9°18′0″N and Longitude: 76°28′0″E, and lies at an elevation of 13 meters. [7] It is bordered on the east by Pallippad, Karuvatta to the north, Kumarapuram and Mahadevikadu to the West, and on the south by Nangiarkulangara.
The webpage provides a comprehensive list of electricity organisations in India.
The company is located at Angamaly, near Kochi, in the state of Kerala. The company was formed to design and manufacture extra High Voltage Electrical equipment in India. The first product rolled out from TELK in 1966 is power transformers. [4] In 2009, TELK became a joint venture company of the Government of Kerala and NTPC Limited. The ...
There is a popular belief that Kayamkulam kayal was once lush green fields and Kayamkulam Raja, angry and desolate from being defeated by Travancore King Marthanda Varma, ordered his naval officers, Arattupuzha Arayars, to rupture the barrier separating it from the sea and let salt water in to make the fields un-cultivable. [8]