Bromborough power stations explained

Bromborough power station
Country:United Kingdom
Location:Bromborough, Merseyside
Status:Decommissioned and demolished
Construction Began:1948
Commissioned:December 1951
Decommissioned:1980
Owner:British Electricity Authority
(1948–1955)
Central Electricity Authority
(1955–57)
Central Electricity Generating Board
(1958–1980)
Operator:As owner
Th Fuel Primary:Fuel oil
Th Technology:Steam turbines
Ps Chimneys:2 (250 feet, 76.2 m)
Ps Cooling Source:Tidal river water
Ps Units Operational:4 × 52.5 MW turbo-alternators
Ps Units Manu Model:English Electric
Ps Units Decommissioned:All
Ps Electrical Capacity:210 MW
Ps Annual Generation:1504.234 GWh (1961)

Bromborough power stations are three electricity generating stations that supplied power to industrial and domestic users in Bromborough, Port Sunlight and the wider Wirral area from 1918 until 1998. Bromborough power station provided public electricity supplies from 1951 to 1980. Central power station Bromborough (1918–1998) was originally owned by Lever Brothers and supplied electricity to domestic users in Port Sunlight as well as electricity and steam to industrial users. Merseyside power station Bromborough (1958–1998) was also owned by Unilever and provided electricity and steam at a range of pressures to industrial users in the locality. All three power stations at Bromborough have been demolished.

Bromborough power station

Bromborough power station was built as a 210 MW coal-fired station by the British Electricity Authority. Construction started in 1948 on a site (53°20'04.2"N 2°57'44.5"W) adjacent to the River Mersey.The consulting engineers for the scheme were Sir Alexander Gibb & Partners. [1]

The plant at Bromborough comprised:[2]

The first machine was commissioned in November 1951, followed by the other sets in December 1951, October 1952, and December 1952.

Condenser cooling water was abstracted from, and returned to, the tidal River Mersey.[3]

Soon after commissioning the boilers were converted to oil-firing in accordance with government policy to take advantage of differential prices between coal and oil as fuel sources.[4]

Bromborough power station was subsequently owned and operated by the Central Electricity Authority (1955–57) and the Central Electricity Generating Board (1958–80) as the UK electricity supply industry was restructured.

Operating data for the station throughout its operational life is shown in the table.[5] [6] [7]

Year
Capacity, MWElectricity output, GWhHours run or (load factor %)Thermal efficiency %
19541881167.545876029.20
19551881354.139876029.15
19561971281.092878428.92
19571971245.667876028.34
19581971098.014876028.14
19611961504.234(87.6 %)28.94
19621961386.124(80.7 %)29.50
19631971412.953(82.3 %)29.97
19671971124.955(65.2 %)28.12
19721971436.221(83.0 %)29.22
1979197182.985(10.6 %)22.79
The station had a high thermal efficiency and was used intensively from the time it was commissioned. As an oil-fired station its utilisation was reduced following the oil crisis of 1973-4 when oil prices increased significantly.  

Bromborough power station was closed in 1980[8] and was demolished in 1986.

Central Power Station

Central power station (53°20'29.5"N 2°57'51.7"W) was built by Lever Brothers in 1918 to supply electricity for their manufacturing processes at Port Sunlight works. It initially comprised:[9]

The station was adjacent to the River Mersey which provided water for the condensing plant. In 1929 electricity was installed in the houses of Port Sunlight Village.

In the early 1930 the Central Power Station was expanded with three coal-fired boilers and a 6.25 MW generating set. The station then had a rated capacity of 11.5 MW.

In the 1950s a connection to the National Grid was installed. When local demand was high electricity could be imported from the grid, and conversely could be fed into the grid when local demand was low.

Some of the Unilever manufacturing processes required steam. A 1.3 MW British Thomson-Houston back-pressure generator was installed at the Central Station. This comprised a steam turbine fed with steam at 230 psi (15.9 bar) from the existing boilers. The expanding steam drove an alternator and discharged steam at 50 psi (3.4 bar), which was used in the works processes.

In the 1970s the oldest three boilers were decommissioned and part of the boiler house was demolished. The generating plant was decommissioned in 1998[10] and most of the site was demolished, the 11 kV control room block was retained until new electricity supplies from the National Grid were installed.

Merseyside power station

To help meet increased demand for electricity and steam Unilever Group built an oil-fired power station (53°20'42.9"N 2°58'33.0"W) on Thermal Road industrial estate Bromborough which was commissioned in 1958.

The station comprised:[11]

The total electricity output was 14 MW and the station was designed to generate 80 GWh of electricity for the company's high voltage network.[12] It supplied steam to 15 local companies and electricity to nearly 50 firms. The overall thermal efficiency of the station was about 78  per cent. The station had three slender concrete chimneys.

Oil was supplied to the station by a 4-inch diameter pipeline from Ellesmere Port. The power  station used 100,000 tonnes of fuel oil a year.

The station cost £2.5 million to build and in 1958 was the largest privately owned power station in the UK. It had two 250 feet (76.2 m) high chimneys.

In 1964 work started on expanding Merseyside Power Station to meet growing demand. The new plant comprised:

By 1966 the Unilever network had a total generating capacity of nearly 30 MW and provided steam at 50, 110, 230 and 1,500 psi (3.4, 7.6, 15.9 and 103 bar).

In 1974, a further extension to Merseyside Power Station was undertaken and comprised a single high pressure boiler (rated at 104 tons/h), and two back pressure generating sets (5.8 MW)  operating at 102/45 bar.

The specification and condition of the boilers and turbines in the last few years of operation were as follows.

Merseyside power station - boilers!Boiler Number!Capacity!Fuel!Steam pressure, psi!Notes!Condition c. 1990
1Heavy fuel oil (HFO)650
2HFO650
3HFO650Scrap
4HFO650Scrap
5100 tons/hHFO15004 burners, 8 gallons/minute, Bailey DCS controlsNever used
6100 tons/hHFO15004 burners, 8 gallons/minute, pneumatic Bailey Miniline500 controllersStandby
7100 tons/hCoal1500Bailey DCS controlsDaily use
Merseyside power station - turbines!Turbine Number!Rating!Steam in, psi!Steam out, psi!Notes!Condition c. 1990
P1650230Removed
P2650230Removed
P3650230Removed
S1230110Removed
S2230110Removed
T1
T210 MW150065011 kVUnserviceable
T314 MW1500110Extract at 230 psi, 11 kVDaily use
The requirement for steam was reduced by new manufacturing processes and the aging generating plant was decommissioned in 1998. Merseyside Power Station was subsequently demolished.[13] [14]

Notes and References

  1. Hope's Windows, catalogue 260 : Henry Hope & Sons Ltd : Birmingham : 1951 : p102
  2. Book: Garrett. Frederick C. . Garcke's Manual of Electricity Supply vol. 56. Electrical Press. 1959. London. A-40, A-115.
  3. Web site: Bromborough power station. 8 July 2020. flickr. 30 January 2018 .
  4. Book: Electricity Council. Electricity Supply in the United Kingdom: a Chronology. Electricity Council. 1987. 085188105X. London. 68, 69, 71, 73, 76.
  5. CEGB Annual Report and Accounts 1961, 1962, 1963, CEGB London
  6. Book: CEGB. CEGB Statistical Yearbook 1972. CEGB. 1972. London. 17.
  7. Book: CEGB. CEGB Statistical Yearbook 1978-79. CEGB. 1979. 0902543598. London. 8.
  8. Bromborough P.S appears in the CEGB Statistical Yearrbook 1978-79, but not in the 1981-82 edition
  9. Web site: 31 January 2009. Unilever's Power Stations. 7 July 2020. Wirralwiki.co.uk.
  10. News: 17 February 1999. Plug pulled on power station. Wirral Globe. 7 July 2020.
  11. Web site: November 1977. 1977. Fossil Energy Update: Merseyside power station. 7 July 2020. Google Books. 108.
  12. 1 January 1959. Private enterprise heat and power. New Scientist. 11.
  13. Web site: Central Power Station. 7 July 2020. streetmap.
  14. Web site: 6 December 2010. Merseyside power station gates. 8 July 2020. flickr.