BLCP Power Plant Decodes Environmentally Responsible Water Management
BLCP power plant manages seawater cooling through strict environmental safeguards including temperature monitoring and a 600-meter cooling canal to protect Thailand's coastal ecosystems while maintaining energy security.
As global boiling becomes an increasingly urgent crisis, BLCP power plant demonstrates how it manages seawater cooling in ways that protect the environment, balancing energy security with ecological sustainability.
Global boiling represents a climate crisis far more severe than global warming, and warning signs from the oceans grow louder each day. Rising ocean temperatures stem primarily from human activities that generate greenhouse gases, intensified by increasingly severe El Niño phenomena. Heat accumulating in the oceans triggers marine heatwaves and creates serious disruptions to coastal ecosystems and community economies—from coral bleaching risks to depleted oxygen levels that reduce fish stocks and harm aquaculture farmers.
Strict Safeguards: BLCP Power Plant Controls Cooling Water Quality and Temperature Before Release
Amidst the environmental crisis, BLCP operates as a baseload power producer with dual responsibility: ensuring Thailand's energy security while systematically protecting ecosystems through concrete ESG principles, particularly in sustainable resource management. Using seawater for cooling heat exchange is an internationally accepted standard practice employed by power plants worldwide. The process creates no industrial wastewater because seawater flows through closed pipes in a single pass, exchanging only steam heat without contact with combustion gases. Additionally, the plant is designed to adjust water temperature before release in compliance with Thailand's Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment regulations on power plant wastewater standards (2565 B.E.) and coal power impact monitoring.
BLCP employs three intensive oversight measures:
1. Temperature reduction via outfall canal: Cooled seawater is not immediately discharged but flows through a 600-meter cooling water canal to reduce temperature before release.
2. Continuous real-time monitoring: Water temperature is constantly measured at the discharge point 24/7 to ensure it does not exceed 40 degrees Celsius, with all data reported to regulatory authorities for transparency and maximum efficiency.
3. Sampling checks in the discharge area: Beyond discharge point monitoring, temperature is randomly sampled at 13 stations within 500 meters of the outlet and compared to natural reference points by independent environmental consultants. Temperature changes across all 13 stations must not exceed 2 degrees Celsius relative to the reference point.