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Macau Power Station

1973 establishments in Macau2016 disestablishments in MacauDemolished buildings and structures in ChinaEnergy infrastructure completed in 1973Former oil-fired power stations
Former power stations in ChinaPower stations in Macau
Macau Power Plant
Macau Power Plant

The Macau Power Station (CMC; traditional Chinese: 澳門發電廠; simplified Chinese: 澳门发电厂; pinyin: Àomén Fādiànchǎng, Portuguese: Central Térmica de Macau) was a gas and diesel-fired power station in Nossa Senhora de Fátima, Macau, China. Commissioned in 1973 for its first two units, it was the first power station in Macau. It was decommissioned in 2016.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Macau Power Station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Macau Power Station
漁翁街 Rua dos Pescadores,

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N 22.204166666667 ° E 113.55472222222 °
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漁翁街 Rua dos Pescadores

漁翁街 Rua dos Pescadores
519020 , 望廈 Mong Há
Macau, China
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Macau Power Plant
Macau Power Plant
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Macau Grand Prix
Macau Grand Prix

The Macau Grand Prix (Portuguese: Grande Prémio de Macau; Chinese: 澳門格蘭披治大賽車) is a motorsport road race for automobiles and motorcycles held annually in Macau. It is the only street circuit racing event in which both cars and motorcycles participate. The first Macau Grand Prix event was held in 1954, as a sports car event. In 1961, the title race became an open-wheel Formula Libre event. The event has also had a variety of support races in its duration. Production cars joined the event in 1957, which were superseded by touring cars in 1972. The event received world championship status from 2005 to 2014 as the final round of the World Touring Car Championship. In 1967, the Macau Motorcycle Grand Prix was introduced. In 2008, a GT3 race was added to the event, which became known as the FIA GT World Cup. The highlight of the race weekend is the Macau Formula Three Grand Prix, featuring many national Formula Three champions and drivers from around the world, with the winner being awarded the FIA Formula 3 World Cup. Due to the challenging nature of the circuit, which consists of fast straights (a Formula Three car can reach a top speed of 275 km/h (171 mph) at the end of the straight), tight corners and uncompromising crash barriers, the Macau Grand Prix is considered one of the most demanding circuits in the world. Many current or former Formula One drivers have participated in the event early in their careers and some of them have won the prestigious prize. Previous winners include Riccardo Patrese, Ayrton Senna, Michael Schumacher, David Coulthard, Ralf Schumacher, Ralph Firman, Takuma Sato, Lucas di Grassi, Edoardo Mortara, António Félix da Costa, Felix Rosenqvist and Dan Ticktum.