Early days (1882–1900) Charles Todd, who oversaw
telegraphic communications in the colony and beyond, also introduced the idea of electrical
street lighting, necessitating a public electricity supply. An Act of Parliament created the
South Australian Electric Company in 1882, but the company did not ever start to produce electricity, owing mainly to opposition by those holding interests in the
South Australian Gas Company, which supplied power using
coal gas. The
South Australian Electric Light and Motive Power Company was registered in March 1895 but the quality was poor. Around the turn of the century, things started to change, firstly through the appointment of engineer Frederick William Herbert Wheadon (1872–1947 along with the
Electric Lighting and Traction Company of Australia, which had interests in
Victoria, bought the company, with all of its assets.) began supplying electricity to Adelaide in 1900. Wheadon in the meantime created plans for a new
coal-fired power station on the corner of Grenfell Street and
East Terrace, with the main buildings fronting Grenfell Street designed by South Australian architect
Alfred Wells in a
single-storey design. The new power station, incorporating boilers,
steam generators and a
direct current (DC)
electric generator able to distribute 400
kilowatts, opened on 19 November 1901. By 1917, the output of the power station was 12,000 kilowatts, driven by the great demand. Wheadon and other directors of AESCo foresaw that technical problems would inhibit increasing the power output at that site, and started working on plans for a new site at
Osborne on the
Port River. Construction was delayed by the outbreak of
World War I in 1918. and two years later, the Grenfell Street Power Station closed down. In 1989 the building was acquired by the state and federal governments for the creation of
Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute.
WW2 and coal shortage (1939–1946) The
boilers in the Osborne station initially used
black coal imported from
New South Wales, which, until 1946, held a monopoly over electricity supplies in Adelaide. During
World War II, coal supplies became critically low. The state government sought to establish a reliable long-term source of coal for the state and the
sub-bituminous coal from the
Telford Cut at
Leigh Creek, though of poorer quality, was considered the most viable source. The deposits seemed extensive and extracting the coal by
open-cut methods was considered feasible. Exploratory boring started in 1941 and plans were made to develop the first open-cut mine. The
South Australian Government, led by
Liberal and Country League (later Liberal Party of South Australia) Premier
Tom Playford, had committed to the use of Leigh Creek coal, and excavation started in 1943. ==Establishment of ETSA ==