Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

List of coal-fired power stations in Australia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

These fossil fuel power stations burn coal to power steam turbines that generate some or all of the electricity they produce. Australia's fleet of coal-fired power stations is aging and many are due for decommissioning, and are being replaced by a combination of mostly renewable energy. In early 2017, 75% of the coal-fired power stations in the country were operating beyond their original design life.[1]

The declining cost of renewable energy sources, such as solar power, wind power and battery storage, means it is unlikely a new coal-fired power station will ever be built in Australia.[2] The Liddell Power Station is the latest major coal-fired power station to be decommissioned, which took place on 28 April 2023.[3]

Remove ads

New South Wales

Summarize
Perspective
More information Power station, Commission year ...

Total (MW): 8,240

Decommissioned stations

More information Power station, Commission year(s) ...
Remove ads

Queensland

More information Power station, Commission year ...

Total (MW): 8,080

Remove ads

Victoria

More information Power station, Commission year ...

Total (MW): 4,730

Western Australia

More information Power station, Commission year ...

Total (MW): 1,410

  • Kwinana A (240 MW) was shut down in 2010, and Kwinana C (400 MW) was shut down in 2015.[30]
Remove ads

Other states/territories

Australian Capital Territory

The Australian Captial Territory does not use coal or oil to generate electricity. The Kingston Powerhouse was the last coal-fired power station in the territory, but was decommissioned in 1957.

Northern Territory

The Northern Territory relies predominantly on natural gas, as well as various renewable energy sources. Likewise, it has no functioning coal-fired power stations.

South Australia

South Australia previously had a number of coal power stations. The last to be closed were the Northern and Playford B power stations.[31]

Tasmania

Tasmania has no functioning coal-fired power stations, instead using primarily hydroelectricity, with natural gas used as a backup.

Remove ads

See also

Notes

  1. Prior to 2022, Unit 4 was scheduled to close in 2030, unit 1 scheduled to close in 2031, units 2 and 3 scheduled to close in 2032.[8]

Sources

  • Boom and Bust 2021: Tracking The Global Coal Plant Pipeline (Report). Global Energy Monitor. 5 April 2021.

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads