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List of power stations in South Dakota
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This is a list of electricity-generating power stations in the U.S. state of South Dakota. In 2022, South Dakota had a total summer capacity of 6,324 MW through all of its power plants, and a net generation of 17,900 GWh.[2] In 2023, the electrical energy generation mix was 55.4% wind, 21% hydroelectric, 13.9% natural gas, 9.2% coal, 0.3% solar, 0.1% biomass, and 0.1% petroleum.[1]
Sources of South Dakota utility-scale electricity generation,
full-year 2023:[1]
full-year 2023:[1]
- Wind (55.4%)
- Hydroelectric (21.0%)
- Natural gas (13.9%)
- Coal (9.20%)
- Solar (0.30%)
- Biomass (0.10%)
- Petroleum (0.10%)
- 0.00%
During 2021, South Dakota was among the top U.S. states in its share of renewable electricity generation. It was also among the top states in per-capita consumption. In recent years, more electricity was consumed than was produced and wind generation has been expanding rapidly in the state.[3]
South Dakota power grid
South Dakota electricity generation by type
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Nuclear power stations
The Pathfinder Nuclear Generating Station was an early commercial and demonstration plant near Sioux Falls that generated up to 59 MW of grid-connected electricity for brief periods during years 1966–1967.[4] The single BWR reactor was decommissioned in 1967, the facility converted to use oil and gas in 1968, and ultimately retired in the early 2000s. The reactor and other nuclear components were removed in 1990.[5] South Dakota had no utility-scale plants that used fissile material as a fuel in 2019.[1]
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Fossil-fuel power stations
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Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration serves as a general reference.[6]
Coal
Natural gas
A Waste heat recovery from natural-gas-fired turbines at compressor stations on the Northern Border Pipeline.
Petroleum
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Renewable power stations
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Perspective
Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration serves as a general reference.[6]
Biomass
Hydroelectric
Former facilities:
- Johnson Siding Dam - decommissioned 1930's[17]
Solar
Wind
See also list of farms from the South Dakota Public Utilities Commission.[19]
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Storage power stations
Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration serves as a general reference.[6]
Battery storage
HVDC converter stations
References
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