The current Yallourn W power station was built in the 1970s at Yallourn West. The four units are Toshiba built 3 stage reheat turbines with steam supplied by four 'subcritical'
pulverized coal-fired boilers. In 1969 it was announced that the town of Yallourn would be demolished to enable an expansion of the coal mine, with demolition commencing in the 1970s and completed by 1982. Yallourn W power station was the second Victorian generating entity to be privatised in 1996 when it was sold to a consortium including
PowerGen,
Itochu,
AMP, Hastings and
State Super. The plant is currently owned by
EnergyAustralia. With the coal supply from Yallourn's East Field mine expected to be exhausted in 2007, work commenced on a diversion of the nearby
Morwell River in 2002 to enable access to further coal sources from the Maryvale coal field. Without this, the power station potentially faced significant modification or even closure. The Morwell River Diversion, and the access to coal supplies it allows, will ensure Yallourn can continue to operate until 2032. The diversion was constructed over five years at a cost of A$122 million, and came in on time and on budget. In 2007 the station's name was shortened to be "Yallourn Power Station".
Carbon Monitoring for Action estimates this power station emits of
greenhouse gases each year as a result of burning
coal. The
Federal Government announced the introduction of a
Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme commencing in 2010 to help
combat climate change. It is expected to impact on emissions from power stations. The National Pollutant Inventory provides details of other pollutant emissions, but not
CO2. During 2018 and 2019, the station had 37 outages. In 2024, at least one of the 4 generators had unplanned outage for 32% of the time.
Fire and flooding On 21 June 2013 a fire broke out in a control panel causing three units to trip. This multi-unit contingency caused a "Pricing Event" on the
National Electricity Market, and the
Market Operator reported the event as part of an industrial action campaign. Police later announced their finding that the event was an act of sabotage. In late 2007, a subsidence in the mine wall resulted in the Latrobe River bursting through, damaging coal conveying plant and flooding low levels of the mine. Urgent earthwork repairs were made with the co-operation of other power generators. Coal production was limited for some weeks. On 6 June 2012, a
levee bank failure resulted in the flooding of the Yallourn coal mine causing damage to its infrastructure and cutting fuel supply to the power station. On 11 June 2021, the mine was flooded by heavy rains, shutting down 3 of the 4 power units.
Closure announcement On 10 March 2021, it was announced that the closure date for Yallourn W had been revised from 2032 to 2028 due to low wholesale electricity prices as well as rising operating costs. A 350 MW battery is set to be completed by 2026. ==Engineering heritage award==