Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Callide Power Station

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Country
  
Australia

Commission date
  
1965

Type
  
Steam turbines

Phone
  
+61 7 4992 9329

Units operational
  
8

Status
  
Baseload

Primary fuel
  
Coal

Owner
  
CS Energy

Construction cost
  
28.7 million USD

Location
  
Biloela, Central Queensland

Address
  
Lot 14 Biloela Callide Rd, Dumgree QLD 4715, Australia

Callide dam near full callide power station in background zoyts


Callide Power Station is located near Biloela, in Central Queensland, Australia. It is coal powered with eight steam turbines with a combined generation capacity of 1,720 MW of electricity. Callide A was commissioned in 1965 and refurbished in 1998.

Contents

The coal for Callide comes from the nearby Callide Coalfields and water from the Awoonga dam and Stag Creek Pipeline.

Callide AEdit

At the end of 1962 approval was granted for a new power station near Biloela. Work commenced at the site in February 1963. The design of the plant based around separate generating units and a control room was a first for Queensland. It was also the first power station in Queensland to use dry cooling towers.

It has four 30 MW steam turbines, the first of which was operating by June 1965. From its commissioning a drought meant water restrictions at the station reduced output. The second set was expected to be operating by May 1966, but was lost at sea while being transported from England. A replacement unit arrived in June 1967. The third set was operating in October 1967 and the fourth in May 1969. The total cost of the project was A$28.7 million.

Callide A has been in storage since 2001, except for Unit 4 which is being used for the Callide Oxyfuel project.

Callide BEdit

Following on from an aggressive construction program at Tarong Power Station, Callide B was commissioned in 1988 with two 350 MW steam turbines. The Hitachi machines are almost identical to those in Tarong and Stanwell.

Callide CEdit

The Callide Power Plant (a.k.a. Callide C) was commissioned in 2001 with two 460 MW advanced cycle steam turbines. Callide C uses a more efficient "supercritical" boiler technology to burn coal to generate electricity.

Carbon Monitoring for Action estimates this power station emits 5.73 million tonnes of greenhouse gases each year as a result of burning coal. The Australian Government introduced a Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme in 2011 to help combat climate change, intended to reduce emissions from power stations. The scheme was replaced in 2014 by a 'direct action' program. The National Pollutant Inventory provides details of other pollutant emissions, but, as at 23 November 2008, not CO2.

References

Callide Power Station Wikipedia