- The West Burton-A coal-fired power station has ceased operations after 57 years.
- It generated a total of 491,792 GWh, enough to power 164 million homes annually.
The West Burton-A coal-fired power station in Nottinghamshire, which has been generating coal-fired electricity for 57 years, has ceased operations.
Its four 500 MW units generated a total of 491,792GWh, enough to power 164 million homes for a year, or all of London’s households for 44 years.
The last generation was produced on 7th March, with Units 1 and 2 providing the final power to the grid.
EDF, which owns the station, plans to assist the UK Atomic Energy Authority with site clean-up and the establishment of a prototype fusion energy plant called UK Industrial Fusion Solutions Ltd.
In a statement, EDF said: “The station and its workforce have fulfilled the request to have 400MW available through winter ‘22/23 as an emergency standby option. We are delighted that the government has recently established UK Industrial Fusion Solutions Ltd (UKIFS) to deliver a prototype fusion energy plant at the West Burton-A site; alongside safe demolition and clean-up of the coal station, EDF will continue to help UKAEA enable progress at the site.”