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Named for George Garland Allen, a former president and first chairman of the board for Duke Power, the Allen facility is the only Duke Energy station with five units under one roof. The plant is equipped with a flue-gas desulfurization system, completed in 2009, that decreases the air emissions coming from the plant.
The H.F. Lee Energy Complex, formerly the Goldsboro Plant, is an electrical power generating complex operated by Duke Energy. The power complex was originally owned by the Carolina Power & Light Company , which inaugurated a coal-fired power plant in 1951.
dates Unit capacity (2009) Nameplate capacity (2009 MW) Owner type Owner(s) (2009) Closure date A.B. Brown: Posey Co. / Vand. Co. 4 4 1 1979 2 1986 3 1991 4 2002 1 & 2 265 MW 3 & 4 88.2 MW 707 Large corporation Vectren: Cayuga: Cayuga: 2 3 1 1970 2 1972 1 531 MW 2 531 MW 1,062 Large corporation Duke Energy Indiana: 2028 Clifty Creek: Madison: 6 ...
The Riverbend Steam Station was a former 454-MW coal-fired electrical power plant in Gaston County, North Carolina, owned by Duke Energy. It was originally slated for decommissioning in 2015, but was closed in April 2013. [1] The four-unit station was named for a bend in the Catawba River on which it was located. Riverbend was considered a ...
The 1,065 megawatts (1,428,000 hp) power plant is owned by Duke Energy and its last generator was commissioned in 1991. The power station generates electricity by shifting water between an upper and lower reservoir. The upper Bad Creek Reservoir was created by damming Bad Creek and West Bad Creek while Lake Jocassee serves as the lower reservoir.
Duke Energy Walters Dam , also known locally as the Waterville Dam, is a hydroelectric dam in Haywood County of western North Carolina , in the Great Smoky Mountains . The concrete arch dam is 180 ft (55 m) high by 800 ft (240 m) long, impounding the Pigeon River , near Interstate 40 .
As of 10 a.m. Sunday, Duke Energy's outage map reports 21,490 customers are without power. Most of those are on the Ohio side of the river, with less than 200 outages in Northern Kentucky.
Duke Energy's service territory covers 104,000 square miles (270,000 km 2) with 250,200 miles (402,700 km) of distribution lines. [4] Almost all of Duke Energy's Midwest generation comes from coal, natural gas, or oil, while half of its Carolinas generation comes from its nuclear power plants. During 2006, Duke Energy generated 148,798,332 ...