Croydon power stations

Croydon Power Stations
Croydon B power station's cooling towers in 1973
CountryEngland
LocationCroydon, Greater London
Coordinates51°22′44″N 0°07′16″W / 51.3788°N 0.1211°W / 51.3788; -0.1211
StatusA & B: Decommissioned and demolished
Commission dateA: 1896, B: 1950, Gas turbine: 2005
Decommission dateA: 1973, B: 1983
OwnerAs operator
OperatorsCroydon Corporation
(1896–1948)
British Electricity Authority
(1948–1955)
Central Electricity Authority
(1955–1957)
Central Electricity Generating Board
(1958–1983)
Gas Turbine: Rolls-Royce Power Developments Ltd
Thermal power station
Primary fuelCoal, Gas turbine: natural gas
ChimneysB: 2 (extant)
Cooling towersA: wooden towers plus 2 concrete, B: 6 parabolic concrete
Cooling sourceRecirculating water
Power generation
Units operationalA: 1 × 30 MW; B: 4 × 52.5 MW plus 2 × 70 MW gas turbines; Gas turbine: 1 × 50 MW
Make and modelGas turbine Rolls-Royce Trent
Units decommissionedA & B All
Nameplate capacityGas turbine 50 MW
Annual net output(See graphs below)
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

grid reference TQ307661

The Croydon power stations refers to a pair of demolished coal-fired power stations and to a gas-fired power station in the Purley Way area of Croydon, London.

The coal-fired stations operated from 1896 until 1984, and the gas-fired station opened in 2005. Croydon B power station's chimneys have been retained as a local landmark.

Although outside the borough, Beddington Energy Recycling Facility has been included for completeness. Croydon has a long history with the Beddington Sewage Farm, and is a member of the South London Waste Partnership.