UK’s last coal-fired power plant closes

DOMINATING THE ENGLISH LANDSCAPE Britain’s remaining coal plant in the East Midlands, due for shutdown on Monday. —SCREENGRAB FROMAFP VIDEO

DOMINATING THE ENGLISH LANDSCAPE Britain’s remaining coal plant in the East Midlands, due for shutdown on Monday. —Screengrab from Agence France-Presse video

LONDON, United Kingdom — Britain’s last coal-fired power station officially closed on Monday, making it the first G7 country to end its reliance on fossil fuel to produce electricity.

The closure of Ratcliffe-on-Soar, a power plant that has dominated the surrounding central England landscape for nearly 60 years, marks a symbolic step in the United Kingdom’s ambition to decarbonize electricity by 2030 and become carbon neutral by 2050.

“The era of coal might be ending, but a new age of good energy jobs for our country is just beginning,” Energy Minister Michael Shanks said in a statement.

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Uniper, owner of the Ratcliffe-on-Soar factory, said the site will be put into a two-year decommissioning period beginning in October.

The company’s 350 employees and contractors will either be redeployed to other assignments or leave the business within three redundancy windows before the end of 2026, Uniper told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

In its place will be a new development—a “carbon-free technology and energy hub,” the company said.

The plant’s closure marks the end of Britain’s 140-year dependence on coal as it becomes the first in the G7 of rich nations to do away entirely with coal-powered electricity.

Italy plans to do so by next year, France in 2027, Canada in 2030 and Germany in 2038. Japan and the United States have no set dates.

Consigned to history

“Britain has set an example the rest of the world must follow” said Doug Parr, Greenpeace UK policy director.

“There are further battles to be had to phase out oil and gas, fulfilling the promise by all countries at COP28 to transition away from fossil fuels,” he added.

The history of Britain’s reliance on coal dates back to 1882, when the world’s first coal-fired power station was built in central London.

The polluting fossil fuel played a vital part in British economic history, powering the Industrial Revolution of the 18th and 19th centuries which made the country a global superpower.

Even into the 1980s, it still represented 70 percent of the country’s electricity mix before its share declined in the 1990s as the government began to implement stricter regulations to tackle pollution.

In the last decade the fall has been even sharper, slumping to 38 percent in 2013, 5.0 percent in 2018 then just 1.0 percent last year.

“Coal was the backbone of the UK’s power generation for over a century, but its place is now in the history books,” said Tony Bosworth, energy campaigner of Friends of the Earth.

“The priority now is to move away from gas as well, by developing as fast as possible the UK’s huge homegrown renewable energy potential and delivering the economic boost that will bring,” he said.

Decline in energy mix

In 2023, a third of electricity production was made up of natural gas while a quarter came from wind power and 13 percent from nuclear power, according to electricity operator National Grid ESO.

The new Labour government plans to further decarbonize the energy mix.

It launched its flagship green energy plan after its election win in July, with the creation of a publicly owned body to invest in offshore wind, tidal power and nuclear power.

In recent years, Ratcliffe-on-Soar, which had the potential to power two million homes, was only tapped when big spikes in electricity use were expected, such as during a cold snap in 2022 or the 2023 heatwave.

Its last delivery of 1,650 tonnes of coal at the start of this summer barely supplied 500,000 homes for eight hours. —Agence France-Presse

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