The first industrial
hydro-electric power plant was established at
Bullendale in
Otago in 1885, to provide power for a 20
stamp battery at the Phoenix mine. The plant used water from the nearby Skippers Creek, a tributary of the
Shotover River.
Reefton was the first town with a reticulated public electricity supply from a significant hydroelectric plant after the commissioning of the
Reefton Power Station in 1888. It was followed by Wellington in June 1889. The first hydro-electric power station constructed by the government was the
Okere Falls Power Station near Rotorua. The plant began operating in May 1901. Electricity was transmitted at 3300 volts over a route to Rotorua, and was used to drive sewage pumps, and some public buildings including five thermal baths. During the next twenty years private companies and local authorities established a number of stations, including
Waipori in Otago and
Horahora on the Waikato River. The first large scheme developed by the government was
Coleridge in
Canterbury, opened in 1914.{{cite encyclopedia Other significant early stations include
Mangahao (1924),
Arapuni (1929) and Tuai (1929), connected to a single North Island grid in 1934, and
Waitaki (1935) in the South Island. The
Waikaremoana cascade was completed in the 1940s with Piripaua and Kaitawa stations. A further seven stations were developed as a cascade on the
Waikato River from 1953 and 1970. In the 1950s development of the
Clutha River with
Roxburgh Dam and the upper
Waitaki in the
MacKenzie Basin with "
Tekapo A" was begun. With commissioning of the
HVDC Inter-Island link in 1965, the Waitaki scheme was further expanded with Benmore Power Station (1965),
Aviemore Dam (1968), and later Tekapo B, and
Ōhau A,
B and
C. In the North Island, the
Tongariro Power Scheme was completed between 1964 and 1983. The plan in 1959 to raise the level of
Lake Manapouri for hydro-electric development was met with resistance, and the
Save Manapouri Campaign became a milestone in environmental awareness. Later hydro schemes, such as the last large hydro to be commissioned,
Clyde Dam in 1992, were also controversial. The country experienced a boom in large-scale hydropower development from 1950 to 1980, but such development has significantly declined afterward. Notably, there have been no new large-scale hydropower projects since the commissioning of the Clyde Power Station in 1992. ==Generation==