Plant Detail

Salsbruket Hydropower Plant

Salsbruket is a hydropower facility in Trøndelag, Norway, drawing water from the Oppløyelva watershed. Operational since 1987 and connected to the NO3 price zone.

Salsbruket at a Glance

Salsbruket is a hydropower plant (Kraftverk) located in Nærøysund municipality, Trøndelag county, Norway [1][2][3]. The facility has been in operation since 1987 [4] and is registered with the Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate (NVE) under plant ID 613 [1].

The plant draws its water supply from the Oppløyelva watershed system, positioning it within a well-established hydrological context in central Norway [5]. It operates within the NO3 electricity price zone, which covers parts of central and northern Norway and is relevant for understanding market exposure and grid dynamics [6].

Ownership and Operator

Salsbruket is held under concession by **ALBERT COLLETT**, the primary rights holder for this facility [7]. Understanding the ownership structure is essential for stakeholders evaluating operational continuity, investment decisions, and regulatory compliance. The concession holder is responsible for maintaining the plant in accordance with Norwegian hydropower regulations and environmental standards.

Hydrological Context

The plant is fed by the **Oppløyelva watershed**, a river system that supplies consistent water resources to the facility [5]. The Oppløyelva basin is a key hydrological unit in the region, and understanding its seasonal flow patterns and long-term precipitation trends is critical for assessing plant performance and energy output consistency.

Regional Location and Grid Connection

Municipality: Nærøysund County: Trøndelag Electricity Price Zone: NO3 [6]

Salsbruket is situated in a region with established hydropower infrastructure. The nearest Statnett transformer station (66 kV) is approximately 0.61 km away [8], indicating good grid connectivity for power evacuation. The nearest major industrial zone (Verdal Industripark) is located approximately 115 km away [9].

Data Center Suitability Assessment

Salsbruket has received a Grade A data center suitability rating from the HydroSec assessment framework [10]. This rating reflects the plant's potential to support mission-critical infrastructure such as data centers, which require reliable, stable power supply. However, detailed capacity specifications and sub-component scores are available only to registered users.

What You'll Unlock After Registration

HydroSec's full intelligence platform provides registered users with:

  • Detailed technical specifications: Maximum capacity (MW), average production (MWh/year), and gross head (m)
  • Advanced hydrological analysis: Seasonal flow patterns, precipitation trends, and multi-year production forecasts
  • Infrastructure mapping: Precise grid connection points, transmission capacity, and distance metrics
  • Comparative benchmarking: Performance against similar plants in the region and across Norway
  • Investment-grade data: Historical production records and operational reliability metrics

These insights are essential for asset managers, family offices, and infrastructure investors evaluating hydropower assets for acquisition, partnership, or data center co-location opportunities.

Risks and Limitations

Regulatory and Concession Risk: The plant operates under a concession granted by Norwegian authorities. Changes to concession terms, environmental regulations, or water rights could affect operational scope or profitability. Concession status with NVE is currently unrecorded in public databases [11].

Hydrological Variability: Hydropower output is inherently dependent on precipitation and water availability. Drought periods or changes in watershed hydrology could reduce generation capacity below historical averages. Long-term climate trends should be evaluated independently.

Market Price Risk: The plant's revenue exposure to the NO3 price zone means earnings fluctuate with regional electricity prices, which are influenced by broader Nordic market dynamics, transmission constraints, and seasonal demand.

Grid and Infrastructure Risk: Proximity to grid infrastructure (0.61 km to nearest transformer station) is favorable, but any disruption to transmission systems could affect power evacuation and revenue.

Data Limitations: This page presents information available in public registries. Detailed operational metrics, financial performance, and forward-looking assessments require direct engagement with the concession holder or registered access to HydroSec's full platform.

No Guarantee of Returns: Hydropower assets carry operational, regulatory, and market risks. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Investors should conduct independent due diligence and consult with legal and financial advisors before making investment decisions.

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Data Sources: Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate (NVE), Statnett grid registry [1][2]

Last Updated: Information current as of platform publication date. For the most recent regulatory or operational changes, consult NVE directly.

Frequently asked questions

What is Salsbruket and when did it start operating?

Salsbruket is a hydropower plant (Kraftverk) located in Nærøysund municipality, Trøndelag county, Norway. It has been in operation since 1987 [4].

Who owns and operates Salsbruket?

Salsbruket is held under concession by ALBERT COLLETT [7], the primary rights holder responsible for the facility's operation and compliance with Norwegian hydropower regulations.

Which river system supplies water to Salsbruket?

Salsbruket draws water from the Oppløyelva watershed system [5], a key hydrological unit in central Norway that provides consistent water resources to the facility.

What electricity price zone does Salsbruket operate in?

Salsbruket operates in the NO3 electricity price zone [6], which covers parts of central and northern Norway and is relevant for understanding market exposure and grid dynamics.

How is Salsbruket connected to the power grid?

The nearest Statnett transformer station (66 kV) is approximately 0.61 km away [8], indicating good grid connectivity for power evacuation.

What is Salsbruket's data center suitability rating?

Salsbruket has received a Grade A data center suitability rating from the HydroSec assessment framework [10], reflecting its potential to support mission-critical infrastructure. Detailed capacity specifications are available to registered users.

What detailed information becomes available after registration?

Registered users gain access to detailed technical specifications (MW capacity, annual production, gross head), advanced hydrological analysis, infrastructure mapping, comparative benchmarking, and investment-grade historical data.

What are the main risks associated with Salsbruket?

Key risks include regulatory and concession changes, hydrological variability affecting output, electricity price zone exposure, grid infrastructure dependencies, and market-driven revenue fluctuations. Investors should conduct independent due diligence.

Sources

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