Fawley was one of the
Hinton Heavies, and was built by
Mitchell Construction Architect Colin Morse RIBA for the
CEGB between 1965 and 1969. It was commissioned in 1971 as a 2,000-mega
watt (MW) power station, with four 500 MW generating units, each consisting of a boiler supplying steam to a turbine that powers an associated generator. The boilers were capable of delivering 1,788.0 kg/s of steam at 158.6 bar and 538 °C. The cooling pumps were Britain's largest with a flow of 210,000 GPM. One was driven by an experimental super-conducting electric motor. In 1978/79 Fawley was presented with the Hinton Cup, the
CEGB's
"good house keeping trophy". The award was commissioned by
Sir Christopher Hinton, the first chairman of the C.E.G.B. It was the first time that a C.E.G.B region (South West) had won both the Hinton Trophy and Hinton Cup. The cup going to the Solent transmission district. The operating data for the main plant is shown in the table: The electricity output, in GWh, is shown graphically:{ "version": 2, "width": 600, "height": 200, "data": [ { "name": "table", "values": [ { "x": 1972, "y": 7060 }, { "x": 1979, "y": 10047 }, { "x": 1981, "y": 5272 }, { "x": 1982, "y": 4734 }, { "x": 1984, "y": 2007 }, { "x": 1985, "y": 12981 }, { "x": 1986, "y": 2110 }, { "x": 1987, "y": 4234 } ] } ], "scales": [ { "name": "x", "type": "ordinal", "range": "width", "zero": false, "domain": { "data": "table", "field": "x" } }, { "name": "y", "type": "linear", "range": "height", "nice": true, "domain": { "data": "table", "field": "y" } } ], "axes": [ { "type": "x", "scale": "x" }, { "type": "y", "scale": "y" } ], "marks": [ { "type": "rect", "from": { "data": "table" }, "properties": { "enter": { "x": { "scale": "x", "field": "x" }, "y": { "scale": "y", "field": "y" }, "y2": { "scale": "y", "value": 0 }, "fill": { "value": "steelblue" }, "width": { "scale": "x", "band": "true", "offset": -1 } } } } ] }The high output in 1984/5 as associated with the
1984/5 Miners' Strike, and the shortage of coal for
coal-fired power stations. There were also 4 × 17.5 MW auxiliary gas turbine generators on the Fawley site giving a total output of 70 MW, these machines had been commissioned in September 1969. Two units were mothballed in 1995, leaving the station with a capacity of only 1,000 MW.
Proposed Fawley B station CEGB plans for a coal-fired Fawley B station were not pursued following privatisation of the industry in the late 1980s.
Closure On 18 September 2012, RWE npower announced they would be shutting down Fawley power station by the end of March 2013, due to the EU
Large Combustion Plant Directive. The power station was duly shut on 31 March 2013 after more than 40 years in operation. ==Impact on wildlife==