Millmerran Power Station

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{{#badges: CoalSwarm|Navbar-Australiacoal}}Millmerran power station is a 880-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant in Queensland, Australia.

Location

The map below shows the location of the plant, near Millmerran, Queensland.

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Background on Plant

The Millmerran Power Station is an 880 MW coal-fired power station near the town of Millmerran on the Darling Downs in southern Queensland. The plant is an air-cooled supercitical design which the company states uses 10% less coal and 90% less water than conventional coal plants.[1]

Intergen states that the Millmerran Operating Company "employs 50 people directly and 150 people indirectly when coal mine employees and other sub-contractors are included." Coal for the power station is sourced from the adjacent Commodore mine. InterGen is owned jointly by the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan and China Huaneng Group/Guandong Yudean Group.[1]

Environmental impact

National Pollutant Inventory (NPI) data for 2016-2017 show that Millmerran emitted the most mercury of any power station outside Victoria, with 256.4 kg.[2][3]

In November 2019 the plant was chosen by the Australia Coal Association's Coal21 fund as the site of a planned integrated carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) project. The project would cost an estimated A$150 million.[4]

Plant Details

  • Sponsor: Millmerran Power Management Pty Ltd
  • Parent company: China Huaneng, Intergen
  • Location: Millmerran, Queensland, Australia
  • Coordinates: -27.9606961, 151.2793012 (exact)
  • Status: Operating
  • Gross capacity: 880 MW (Units 1 & 2: 440 MW)
  • Type: Supercritical
  • In service: 2002-03
  • Coal type:
  • Coal source: Commodore mine
  • Source of financing: KDB Infrastructure Investment Asset Management Co. Ltd. (KIAMCO, Korea - US$62 million)[5]

Articles and resources

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Intergen, "Millmerran", Intergen website, accessed April 2016
  2. Coal-fired power stations caused surge in airborne mercury pollution, study finds, The Guardian, Apr. 3, 2018
  3. National Pollutant Inventory, Australian Government, accessed November 2018
  4. Australian carbon capture hub receives funding, Gas World, Nov. 19, 2019
  5. Joojin Kim and Soyoung Lee, “Financing Dirty Energy: How Korean Public Financial Institutions Support Coal Power,” SFOC, Jan 2018

Related SourceWatch articles

External resources