Wolverhampton power station, also known as Commercial Road power station, supplied electricity to the Borough of Wolverhampton, England and the surrounding area from 1895 to 1976. It was redeveloped in several stages to meet growing demand for electricity: including the addition of new plant in 1902 to 1908, 1925 and 1942. The power station was initially owned and operated by Wolverhampton Corporation, but was transferred to the West Midlands Joint Electricity Authority in 1928. The British Electricity Authority assumed ownership at nationalisation in 1948. Wolverhampton power station was decommissioned in 1976.
History
In 1883 Wolverhampton Corporation applied for a provisional order[1] under the Electric Lighting Acts to generate and supply electricity to the town. This was granted by the Board of Trade, however, no construction work was undertaken and a further provisional order was obtained in 1890.[2] The power station was built in Commercial Road (52°34'54"N 2°06'54"W 52°34′54″N2°06′54″W / 52.58167°N 2.11500°W / 52.58167; -2.11500) and was adjacent to the Wolverhampton Level canal for the delivery of coal. It first supplied electricity on 30 January 1895.[3]
Equipment specification
Original plant 1895
The original 1895 plant at Wolverhampton power station comprised Marshall's horizontal compound engines coupled by ropes to Electric Construction Company and Parker dynamos, together with a Belliss engine coupled directly to a Parker dynamo. In 1898 the generating capacity was 632 kW and the maximum load on the system was 318 kW.[4]
New plant 1902–04
New plant was installed from 1902, partly to supply the local tramway system. By 1908 the capacity was 6 MW there were two Babcock & Wilcox 20,000 lb/h (2.52 kg/s) boilers, two 1 MW turbo-alternators.[5] By 1913 there was 3 MW of direct current generating plant and 4 MW of alternating current generation.[3]
In 1904 a refuse destructor was built in Crown Street, this generated steam to drive two 125 kW generators. Further plant was added to the destructor plant bringing the generating capacity up to 750 kW (1913) and 1 MW (1921). This comprised one 500 kW AC turbine and one 500 kW DC turbine.[6]
In 1925 the DC generators were scrapped and two 7.5 MW turbo-alternators were commissioned.[3] This brought the capacity of the station to 23 MW.[3]
Plant in 1942
New plant was commissioned in 1942, comprising:[7]
Boilers:
4 × Thompson La Mont stoker fired boilers each capable of producing 120,000 lb/h (15.1 kg/s), steam conditions 440 psi and 850 °F (30.3 bar, 454 °C),which supplied steam to:
Condenser cooling water was cooled in a single Hennibique reinforced concrete cooling tower with a capacity of 1.5 million gallons per hour (1.89 m3/s).[7]
Operations
Operational data for the station was as follows.
In 1898 maximum electricity demand was 318 kW.[4] There were 208 customers supplied with a total of 211,777 kWh of electricity plus 79,438 kWh for public lamps. The revenue from the sales of current was £6,139 offset by generating costs of £2,211.[4]
Wolverhampton power station operating data 1921–23
Electricity Use
Units
Year
1921
1922
1923
Lighting and domestic
MWh
2,478
2,832
3,071
Public lighting
MWh
244
239
275
Traction
MWh
2,366
2,164
2,437
Power
MWh
16,240
10,522
14,088
Bulk supply
MWh
231
452
7,068
Total use
MWh
21,599
16,209
26,940
Load and connected load
Maximum load
kW
10,125
9,361
11,735
Total connections
kW
23,130
24,255
29,365
Load factor
Per cent
31.5
28.0
32.1
Financial
Revenue from sales of current
£
–
156,349
169,852
Surplus of revenue over expenses
£
–
63,573
79,523
Ownership of Wolverhampton power station was transferred to the West Midlands Joint Electricity Authority in 1928.[5]
Operating data 1934–6
The station capacity and output in the mid-1930s was:[8]
Wolverhampton station capacity and output 1934–36
1934–35
1935–36
Plant capacity MW
30.0
30.0
Maximum load MW
22.0
30.2
Maximum demand load factor %
22.3
13.0
Electricity generated MWh
42,999
34,568
Electricity sold MWh
39,578
31,857
Supply to Wolverhampton Corporation MWh
130,501
149,325
Operating data 1946
Wolverhampton power station operating data in 1946 was:[9]
Wolverhampton power station operating data, 1946
Year
Load factor per cent
Max output load MW
Electricity supplied MWh
Thermal efficiency per cent
1946
32.2
44,400
125,271
19.26
The British electricity supply industry was nationalised in 1948 under the provisions of the Electricity Act 1947 (10 & 11 Geo. 6 c. 54).[10] The Wolverhampton electricity undertaking and the West Midlands Joint Electricity Authority were abolished. Ownership of Wolverhampton power station was vested in the British Electricity Authority, and subsequently the Central Electricity Authority and the Central Electricity Generating Board (CEGB).[11] At the same time the electricity distribution and sales responsibilities of the Wolverhampton electricity undertaking were transferred to the Midlands Electricity Board (MEB).[11]
Operating data 1954–72
Operating data for the period 1954–72 was:[7][12][13]
Wolverhampton power station operating data, 1954–72
Year
Running hours or load factor (per cent)
Max output capacity MW
Electricity supplied GWh
Thermal efficiency per cent
1954
3581
28
84.628
21.00
1955
5033
28
122.040
20.25
1956
4473
28
104.673
19.47
1957
4077
28
90.982
19.62
1958
2983
28
71.355
20.17
1961
(25.0 %)
28
61.305
20.20
1962
(10.7 %)
28
26.325
20.14
1963
(1.74 %)
28
4.274
18.34
1967
(22.6%)
28
55.32
18.54
1972
(24.1 %)
28
59.296
20.2
The electricity output in GWh of the station was as shown.
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
Wolverhampton was an electricity supply district covering 106 square miles (275 km2) and a population of 191,500.[7] It encompassed the County Borough of Wolverhampton, and parts of the districts of Tettenhall, Cannock, Seisdon, Shifnal and Bridgnorth. The number of consumers and electricity sold was:[7]
Year
1956
1957
1958
Number of consumers
62,943
64,354
65,353
Electricity sold MWh
475,606
492,667
523,067
Closure and reuse
Wolverhampton power station was decommissioned on 25 October 1976.[14] The main buildings have been adapted to commercial use.
^ abElectricity Council (1987). Electricity supply in the United Kingdom: a Chronology. London: Electricity Council. pp. 45, 60, 69, 73. ISBN085188105X.
^CEGB Annual report and Accounts, 1961, 1962 & 1963
^Central Electricity Generating Board (1972). CEGB Statistical Yearbook 1972. London: Central Electricity Generating Board. p. 13.
^House of Commons. Written answers, Coal-fired power stations, 16 January 1964