Edenderry Power Station Explained

Edenderry Power Station
Country:Republic of Ireland
Location:Edenderry
Coordinates:53.2907°N -7.0869°W
Owner:Bord na Móna
Status:Operational
Th Fuel Primary:Biomass
Ps Electrical Capacity:120 MWe
Commissioned:December 2000

Edenderry Power Station is a large biomass-fired power station at the Cushaling river near Edenderry, in the Republic of Ireland. The station is capable of generating up to of power. It has been owned by Bord na Móna since 2006 and is part of the Powergen Division, having been purchased from E.ON in December 2005.

The station was formerly peat-fired. Trials of co-fuelling the plant with biomass commenced in 2007 and were successful., the plant was co-fired with about 62% biomass (delivered by around 60 heavy goods vehicles per day), of which 336,000 energy tonnes (or 80%) was Irish. The station had a target of 100% biomass by 2023, which was achieved. The ash is sent by rail and deposited at the adjacent Cloncreen bog near Clonbullogue.[1] In 2021 the plant was still burning peat from stocks but was not allowed to cut more.[2]

The station ceased using peat as fuel at the end of 2023. It was Ireland's last operating peat-fired power station; the completion of its switch to biomass fuel marked the end of peat-fired electricity generation in Ireland.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Edenderry Power as a Biomass only plant . www.bordnamona.ie .
  2. Web site: 2021-06-26 . Biomass is being promoted as the future fuel for Edenderry . 2022-06-14 . Agriland.ie . en-GB.
  3. News: O'Doherty . Caroline . Era of peat-fired electricity ends as Edenderry power plant switches fully to burning biomass . . 30 December 2023 . 3 April 2024.