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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Coal culled at Drax after 50-year contribution as carbon capture investment plan put on pause

Significant moment for the business flagged by group CEO as £50m spend on BECCS scheme held off after Track One omission

No more coal: Drax Power Station is now fully fed by biomass.(Image: Steven Eric Parker)

Coal-fired power generation capability has come to an end at Drax with the final two units entering the decommissioning process.

The poignant moment in the plant’s history and the journey to Net Zero comes almost 50 years after fossil fuels were first burned to produce electricity. It had initially planned to end earlier, but was asked by the government to retain the capability through the winter, due to the potential for gas shortages caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. They were not required.

It comes as discussions start with Westminster officials over the grand bioenergy with carbon capture and storage plans, having not been selected as a forerunner in the initial Track One announcements. The power giant’s proposal, now paused, is as an anchor project for the pan-Humber network, with £15 billion of investment in decarbonisation and hydrogen fuel-switching linked to it.

Read more: Humber set to miss out on chance to lead º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's carbon capture and storage push after Track One no-show

Drax, near Selby, first started generating electricity using coal discovered close by in the Seventies. Officially opened in 1974, once the second half of the power station was built in the Eighties, it became the largest power station in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ with the capacity to generate electricity for six million households.

Four of the power station’s six generating units have already been converted to use sustainable biomass, delivering carbon savings of more than 80 per cent. The move transformed Drax to become the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s largest renewable power generator in what was described as the biggest decarbonisation project in Europe.

Tribute was paid to the work in a trading update covering the first quarter of 2023.

Drax Group chief executive Will Gardiner said: "In the first quarter of 2023, we have delivered a strong system support and generation performance, providing renewable, secure, dispatchable power for millions of homes and businesses across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.