H. R. Milner Generating Station | |
Location: | Municipal District of Greenview No. 16, near Grande Cache, Alberta |
Coordinates: | 54.0073°N -119.1034°W |
Owner: | Milner Power Inc. |
Status: | O |
Cost: | Unit 2: CAD$142 million [1] |
Th Fuel Primary: | Coal (50%) Natural gas (50%) |
Th Technology: | Steam turbine |
Ps Combined Cycle: | No |
Ps Units Operational: | 1 x 150 MW, 1 x 204 MW |
Ps Units Planned: | 1 x 300 MW (Unit 2 Uprating) |
Ps Electrical Capacity: | 300 MW |
Construction Began: | 1969 |
Commissioned: | Unit 1: 1972 Unit 2: April 2020 |
H. R. Milner Generating Station is a coal and natural gas-fired power station owned by Maxim Power, located near Grande Cache, Alberta, Canada. H.R. Milner is currently undergoing conversion from coal to natural gas as the power station's fuel source and is expected to be complete by April 2020.[1] [2]
H.R. Milner's was first commissioned in 1972 as a coal-fired power station consisting of a single 150 MW unit fuelled by sub-bituminous coal from a nearby coal mine.[3] The plant was constructed and initially owned by Canadian Utilities, then owned by ATCO Power from 2000 to 2004. The plant is named after H. R. Milner a former executive with Canadian Utilities.
In March 2016, the station was temporarily shutdown by Maxim Power due to low demand.[4] The station was temporarily shutdown again in April 2018 due to constrained fuel supplies.[2]
In 2011, the Alberta Utilities Commission approved the construction of a new 500 MW Supercritical Unit.[5] This was considered controversial as the approval was given just in time to allow construction to be completed before new federal regulations (essentially preventing new coal plant construction) were put into place.[6] In the wake of new federal regulations governing greenhouse gas emissions introduced in 2012, Maxim Power applied to change the new unit from one 500 MW coal-fired generator, to two 260 MW natural gas fired generators. This application was approved by the Alberta Utilities Commission in June 2014.[7]
On 31 December 2019, Unit 1 was converted to running off 50% sub-bituminous coal and 50% natural gas, running off the fuel mixture at 9% capacity. Unit 2, a 204 MW simple-cycle natural gas-fired unit, is due to be commissioned in April 2020. This will change the power station's overall fuel mixture to 79% natural gas and 21% sub-bituminous coal.[8] [9]