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The essential role of Concrete transformer substations

Electrical energy is transported from the generation power stations to the final consumers via power lines

The electrical energy is transported from the generation power plants to the final consumers through electrical lines, the voltage is raised in the generation plant, the transport is carried out through high voltage lines in order to reduce losses and when it reaches its destination and close to the consumers, it is reduced again to low voltage. They supply electricity to industries, cities and consumers in general. This reinforced concrete building “Concrete transformer substations ” is one of our company’s niche markets with a considerable market share.

Concrete transformer substations have played an essential and crucial role during the worst moments of the confinement caused by the pandemic, non-stop 24 hours a day, supplying life to the most seriously ill patients by feeding their respirators with electrical energy and their monitoring systems, operating theatres, ventilation and air renewal in hospitals, patient transport centres, petrol stations, logistic centres of the food chain, supermarkets, food industry, security corps centres, EPIS manufacturing and a long list etc. of systems declared essential, such as our own factory, which did not stop during all this time manufacturing spare parts and adapting production to the emergency demand at all times.

These “Concrete transformer substations ” are manufactured and assembled in our factories in Toledo, our company has many years of history but is modern and committed to the environment, having Hydrogen production for our own use and for third parties such as the project ‘Hub Movilidad Sostenible Toledo’, a one hundred percent sustainable initiative that is currently under construction in the Industrial Estate of the regional capital, where a 2 MW photovoltaic plant and an electrolyzer-hydrogen plant will be located. The project, in consortium with the city council, with the participation of other institutions and companies from the Autonomous Community.

Rafael Álvarez, Dean of the School of Technical Engineering Valladolid

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