Widows Creek Fossil Plant | |
Country: | United States |
Location: | Jackson County, near Stevenson, Alabama |
Coordinates: | 34.8842°N -85.755°W |
Owner: | Tennessee Valley Authority |
Status: | B |
Th Fuel Primary: | Bituminous coal |
Ps Cooling Source: | Tennessee River |
Ps Electrical Capacity: | 1,600 |
Ps Annual Generation: | 9,000 GWh |
Commissioned: | Unit 1: July, 1952 Unit 2: October, 1952 Unit 3: November, 1952 Unit 4: January, 1953 Unit 5: June, 1954 Unit 6: July, 1954 Unit 7: February, 1961 Unit 8: February, 1965 |
Decommissioned: | Unit 7: September, 2015 |
Ps Units Decommissioned: | 8 |
Widows Creek Fossil Plant (also known as the Widows Creek Power Plant) was a 1.6-gigawatt (1,600 MW) coal power plant, 4.8miles east of Stevenson, Alabama, USA. The plant, operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority, generated about nine billion kilowatt-hours of electricity a year. It had one of the tallest chimneys in the world at 305m (1,001feet), which was built in 1977, and was removed December 3, 2020 in a controlled demolition.[1] Along with the Chimney of the Harllee Branch Power Plant, it is the tallest chimney to be demolished in the United States.
Initially, six identical 140-MWe units were built between 1952 and 1954. Two more units (575 and 550 MWe name-plate capacity) were added in 1961 and 1965.[2] [3]
The last load of coal was delivered to the plant on September 18, 2015, with only one of its eight generation units working. The coal was enough to power Unit 7 until September 23, 2015.[4] [5]
On January 9, 2009, the plant experienced a dam break on a gypsum slurry pond, and spilled up to 10000USgal of waste (possibly including boron, cadmium, molybdenum and selenium) into the creek of the same name on the property, inundating it with an ashlike substance.[6]
On April 14, 2011, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced a settlement with the Tennessee Valley Authority to resolve alleged Clean Air Act violations at 11 of its coal-fired plants in Alabama, Kentucky, and Tennessee.[7] Under the terms of the agreement, the entire Widows Creek plant was affected:[8]
On June 24, 2015, Google, a multinational technology company, announced it would invest $600 million to install a data center on land made available by the retirement of Units 1-6. A renewable power capacity equivalent to the data center's needs will be added somewhere on the TVA system, so the data center will run on renewable energy.[9] The project broke ground in April 2018.[10]