Drax Power Station, North Yorkshire

Drax Power Station, North Yorkshire

While this website mostly features closed power stations, the focus is to document the decline of using highly polluting fossil fuels such as coal and oil. Drax is moving move away from a reliance on coal and four of the station’s six boilers have been converted to fire biomass, with plans in the making to repower the other two units to run on gas.

Drax, the UK’s largest power station is situated in North Yorkshire, dwarfing the neighbouring village it is named after. It is situated on the River Ouse between Selby and Goole and has a generating capacity of 3,960 megawatts (MW). Drax was the third power station in the area to be commissioned by the Central Electricity Generating Board (CEGB) following the discovery of the Selby Coalfield, the first being an expansion of Ferrybridge (2,000MW Ferrybridge ‘C’) and the second was a new 2,000MW station at Eggborough. The power station was built in two phases – the first phase comprised three units and began operation in 1973. The second phase of construction was completed in 1986, making Drax the last major coal-fired power station to be built in the UK.

Drax Power Station, viewed from the east
Drax Power Station, viewed from the east

Drax was initially conceived as the largest power station in the UK, at 3,000MW. The capacity was expanded further when the CEGB saw this as a good opportunity to install their first 660MW turbogenerator sets and the plans were revised to almost 4 gigawatts.

The turbine hall is around a quarter of a mile long (400m) and the chimney is the tallest industrial chimney in the UK at 259 metres high. The twelve natural draught cooling towers are 114 metres high and arranged in two groups of six to the north and south of the station.

Buildings and Plant Detail

Drax TurbinesTurbine Hall

Drax has 6 x 660MW turbines manufactured by Parsons

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Drax Boilers and MillsBoiler House and Mills

Drax has 6 boilers, four of which have been converted to fire biomass

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Drax Fuel HandlingBiomass and Coal Handling

Drax has an expansive fuel handling network spanning half way around the world

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Decarbonisation – Conversion to Biomass

Compressed wood pellets [Image courtesy Drax Power]
Compressed wood pellets [Image courtesy Drax Power]
Drax began testing the firing of biomass in 2004, when it converted one boiler to co-fire biomass along with coal. In 2012 Drax announced plans to convert three of its six units to full-firing with biomass. Following this conversion the first unit came online in June 2013, the second in 2014 and the third unit in 2016. One further unit was converted to fire biomass in 2018. Drax now supplies up to 12 percent of the UK’s renewable energy through its four biomass-only boilers.

Construction and Infrastructure

Biomass storage domes
Biomass storage domes

A conversion to biomass on such a large scale is a huge undertaking, and is in fact the largest decarbonisation project in Europe. One of the biggest challenges is the logistics behind sourcing the fuel. The biomass is acquired from sustainable forests in North America, where waste products are collected up and processed to create pellets suitable for feeding into the power station. The pellets are then transported by road and rail to Louisiana where they are transferred to 50,000 tonne barges to be brought to the UK. The final leg of the journey takes place by rail after which the wood pellets arrive at Drax and are housed in huge biomass storage domes. Unlike coal, which can be stored outside and open to the elements, biomass needs to be kept dry. The four purpose built domes can each hold 75,000 tonnes of biomass in a controlled atmosphere.

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Carbon Savings

Drax emissions © Dave Pickersgill (CC Licence)
Drax emissions
© Dave Pickersgill (CC Licence)

The overall aim of converting to full-firing of biomass is to reduce the carbon emissions. Drax is the UK’s sole largest emitter of carbon, and although carbon is still released from burning wood chips, it is carbon that has recently been absorbed while the wood was growing in the forest. As the forest is replanted, further carbon is absorbed from the atmosphere to, in theory, create a carbon-neutral process. However, the sustainability of this process has been questioned. The biggest issue, opponents claim, is that the carbon released into the atmosphere will not be fully reabsorbed by new-growth trees. Transportation of the biomass across the Atlantic only further adds to the carbon emissions, along with the deforestation caused by many biomass projects. Drax claim their carbon emissions have been cut by 80%, but independent estimates indicate those emissions may have even increased as a result of the biomass conversion.

Future Plans

The move away from coal isn’t stopping at the conversion of four units to biomass. Drax aims to become free of coal by 2025 and has laid out plans to convert its remaining two coal-fired units to run on gas. The project will see the construction of two combined cycle gas turbine generators, the waste heat from which will be used to generate steam for two of the existing steam turbines. The gas turbines and two converted steam turbines will generate more electricity than the current total station output, while also lowering emissions.

Drax Image Gallery

Visit the plant detail pages above to view more images from each area of the power plant

Silhouette of Drax Power Station at sunset
Silhouette of Drax Power Station at sunset

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